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OAT probe position

 
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rv9jim(at)juno.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jul 16, 2006 5:23 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

I am about to hook up the outside air temp probe. After consulting the
web (thank goodness) I am thinking about placing the sensor in the FAB
prior to the air filter in the snorkel area. My logic says it would give
me OAT with out the heating of the engine temps affecting it. It should
give me air temps for my EFIS to compute DA. My second choice is the
inboard inspection panel in the wing. The FAB position would require no
disconnecting. Am I not seeing something?
Jim Nelson
RV9-A FWF


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klwerner(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Sun Jul 16, 2006 7:21 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

How about radiant engine heat affecting the sensor? And isn't the FAB downstream of the cylinders, i.e. where the heated air goes after cooling the fins?
 
I'd put it under the wing, perhaps right behind the pitot tube.
 
do not archive
[quote] ---


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lhelming(at)sigecom.net
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PostPosted: Sun Jul 16, 2006 7:49 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

You should put it near the wing inspection plate to have better, consistent
readings. Indiana Larry

---


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ekells(at)sympatico.ca
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PostPosted: Sun Jul 16, 2006 9:30 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

I put a Davtron OAT instrument (ACS: page 374) beside the map box and the
OAT probe beside the inner inspection plate on the right wing.
It comes prewired - it's long enough to install without cutting or adding
wire. Very accessible and very maintainable.
Seems remote enough from the prop/engine heat.

Quote:


You should put it near the wing inspection plate to have better,
consistent readings. Indiana Larry

>
>
> I am about to hook up the outside air temp probe. After consulting the
> web (thank goodness) I am thinking about placing the sensor in the FAB
> prior to the air filter in the snorkel area. My logic says it would give
> me OAT with out the heating of the engine temps affecting it. It should
> give me air temps for my EFIS to compute DA. My second choice is the
> inboard inspection panel in the wing. The FAB position would require no
> disconnecting. Am I not seeing something?


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denis.walsh(at)comcast.ne
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PostPosted: Sun Jul 16, 2006 1:44 pm    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

I have tried several positions and returned to my original choice.
It is on the aft fuselage, right side, under the horizontal
stabilizer. It has virtually no errors, reads ok even at zero
airspeed. It is especially good for the Dynon since I have the
magnetometer mounted on the deck in front of the stabilizer. The
wiring on the Dynon OAT probe goes to the magnetometer.

Only down side (pun) is that it is in the sun while inverted. Since
I only use that position momentarily it works well for me.
Denis Walsh

On Jul 16, 2006, at 07:22 265390007, James H Nelson wrote:

Quote:


I am about to hook up the outside air temp probe. After consulting
the
web (thank goodness) I am thinking about placing the sensor in the FAB
prior to the air filter in the snorkel area. My logic says it would
give
me OAT with out the heating of the engine temps affecting it. It
should
give me air temps for my EFIS to compute DA. My second choice is the
inboard inspection panel in the wing. The FAB position would
require no
disconnecting. Am I not seeing something?
Jim Nelson
RV9-A FWF




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gmcjetpilot(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 2:48 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Jim:

The recommendation to your idea is no. Anything in the
engine compartment is HOT, even the inside of the FAB.
Also you want to be as far away from the engine and prop
air blast as practical like on the tail or outb'd wing.
 
The entire engine area is a heated zone.

I understand you think it is ahead of the heat. I guess if you
had it on the tip of the spinner, but Anything in the engine
compartment, inside the airbox included is hotter than the
ambient air temp of the air mass you are flying through.
 
Common locations are lwr surface of wing tip or mid wing
inspection cover or under horz tail in inspection elevator bell
crank access cover. The further away from the engine  
in any direction the better.
 
George M RV-4, RV-7
 

Quote:
posted by: James H Nelson <rv9jim(at)juno.com (rv9jim(at)juno.com)>

I am thinking about placing the sensor in the FAB
prior to the air filter in the snorkel area. My logic says
it would give me OAT with out the heating of the engine
temps affecting it. It should give me air temps for my
EFIS to compute DA.  My second choice is the inboard
inspection panel in the wing.  The FAB position would
require no disconnecting.  Am I not seeing something?
The inboard inspection wing location is fine. Besides
how often are your wings going on and off after you
start flying? Do you want to route more wires thru
the fire wall

Get on board. [url=http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=40791/*http://advision.webevents.yahoo.com/handraisers]You're invited[/url] to try the new Yahoo! Mail Beta.


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seiders(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 4:44 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Naca duct works
At 09:22 AM 7/16/2006, you wrote:
Quote:


I am about to hook up the outside air temp probe. After consulting the
web (thank goodness) I am thinking about placing the sensor in the FAB
prior to the air filter in the snorkel area. My logic says it would give
me OAT with out the heating of the engine temps affecting it. It should
give me air temps for my EFIS to compute DA. My second choice is the
inboard inspection panel in the wing. The FAB position would require no
disconnecting. Am I not seeing something?
Jim Nelson
RV9-A FWF



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ronlee(at)pcisys.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:25 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Quote:
Naca duct works


Negative on an RV-6A. You get too much heat from the engine area.

Ron Lee


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rveighta(at)earthlink.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:42 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Jim, I originally had my OAT probe in the NACA duct, left side of the fuselage.
Bad move; the temp was way high. Then I moved it under the left wing and
it works fine.

I installed the probe in the inboard inspection plate by riveting a small block
of 1/8" thick aluminum, which I had drilled and threaded in the center to accept
the Westach probe body. The actual probe sticks out of the inspection plate
about 1/4".

Do not archive.
Walt Shipley RV-8A Flying, RV-8 building

--


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sisson(at)consolidated.ne
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:42 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Konrad L. Werner wrote:
Quote:
How about radiant engine heat affecting the sensor? And isn't the FAB downstream of the cylinders, i.e. where the heated air goes after cooling the fins?
 
I'd put it under the wing, perhaps right behind the pitot tube.
 
do not archive
That is exactly where I put mine. It works great. I have a Dynon unit. The factory lead was a little short. I called Rynon about lengthening it.  They said go ahead and make it what ever I needed. It is mounted a couple inches behind and in line with the pitot extension.

Phil

do not archive


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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 6:17 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Nope, not if you want an accurate reading. I was doing some glide
performance testing on an RV-6 in the winter, and the OAT indication
varied depending on how much cabin heat we had selected. The back
side of the probe was being warmed from the cockpit, and that was
affecting the indication. This would likely be an issue even if
cabin heat was not selected, as the greenhouse effect from the canopy
means the cockpit temperature is usually warmer than ambient.

Kevin Horton
On 17 Jul 2006, at 08:42, Richard Seiders wrote:

Quote:


Naca duct works
At 09:22 AM 7/16/2006, you wrote:
>
>
> I am about to hook up the outside air temp probe. After
> consulting the
> web (thank goodness) I am thinking about placing the sensor in the
> FAB
> prior to the air filter in the snorkel area. My logic says it
> would give
> me OAT with out the heating of the engine temps affecting it. It
> should
> give me air temps for my EFIS to compute DA. My second choice is the
> inboard inspection panel in the wing. The FAB position would
> require no
> disconnecting. Am I not seeing something?
>


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Rick Galati



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 91
Location: Lake St. Louis MO.

PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 6:21 am    Post subject: Re: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Very true. The only time my NACA duct mounted OAT probe is accurate is when the airplane has finally cooled down to the ambient temperature, such as occurs after being parked in the hangar overnight. One of these days I will get around to relocating that probe and the farther away from the engine compartment, the better.

Rick Galati RV-6A "Darla" 153 hours
ronlee(at)pcisys.net wrote:
Quote:
Naca duct works



Negative on an RV-6A. You get too much heat from the engine area.

Ron Lee


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macrafic



Joined: 01 May 2006
Posts: 5

PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 7:03 am    Post subject: Re: OAT probe position Reply with quote

I had asked Dynon about the OAT position a few months ago. They indicated that, while they could not tell me where to put it, that RV aircraft had had excellent results in the rear fuselage under the horizontal stabilizer. Covering their legal positions while still trying to answer my question. So, I'm going to go with the that soltion, the same one Denis Walsh has stated in another reply here.

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klwerner(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 7:55 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Well, what can I say:  Here's proof that Great Minds think alike!
 
do not archive
 
[quote] ---


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seiders(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 8:25 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Maybe on your 6A, not mine. My oat is consistent with in air temp reports.
Guess it depends where you put it.
Dick

At 09:23 AM 7/17/2006, you wrote:
Quote:

>Naca duct works
Negative on an RV-6A. You get too much heat from the engine area.

Ron Lee



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ronlee(at)pcisys.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 9:49 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

People can do anything even if wrong but with the prevailing comments that
away from the engine area is best why anyone would still go against good
advise is beyond me.

Ron Lee

Quote:
Maybe on your 6A, not mine. My oat is consistent with in air temp reports.
Guess it depends where you put it.
Dick

At 09:23 AM 7/17/2006, you wrote:
>
>>Naca duct works
>Negative on an RV-6A. You get too much heat from the engine area.
>
>Ron Lee
>
>




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dan(at)rvproject.com
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 10:27 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Quote:
People can do anything even if wrong but with the prevailing comments that
away from the engine area is best why anyone would still go against good
advise is beyond me.

Ron Lee

Well said, Ron! If you put your OAT probe out under the wing, you KNOW it
will not suffer from any other heat source. If you put it anywhere else,
like on the fuselage, under the HS, in your NACA vent, in your airbox, do
you KNOW it will work?! Where is there the LEAST risk of inaccuracy? This
is my new pet peeve!!!

If you don't care about OAT inaccuracy, leave the silly thing out! If you
fly IFR you will want one. If you need it for density altitude
calculations, then by all means don't put it where sun could hit it!! Put
it where you KNOW it will work!! Argh!!

do not archive
)_( Dan
RV-7 N714D
http://www.rvproject.com


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LessDragProd(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 11:23 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Of course, there is always the temperature rise due to compressibility.
 
I'm surprised some of the technocrats haven't jumped in on this.  At 200 mph, it should be about 3 degrees at the stagnation point.  Or 90% of that in the boundary layer.
 
I know there is a Mach number squared term in the equation, and someone is bound to correct me that it is only a 2.45834659 degree rise.  Or some other insignificantly different number.  Smile 
Actually, 3 degrees is pretty insignificant, as long as it is consistent.
 
BTW, the RMI microencoder OAT calculates and compensates for the compressibility temperature rise.  I haven't checked into the rest, yet.
 
Regards,
Jim Ayers
 
In a message dated 07/17/2006 11:28:50 AM Pacific Daylight Time, dan(at)rvproject.com writes:
Quote:
--> RV-List message posted by: "Dan Checkoway" <dan(at)rvproject.com>

Quote:
People can do anything even if wrong but with the prevailing comments that
away from the engine area is best why anyone would still go against good
advise is beyond me.

Ron Lee

Well said, Ron!  If you put your OAT probe out under the wing, you KNOW it
will not suffer from any other heat source.  If you put it anywhere else,
like on the fuselage, under the HS, in your NACA vent, in your airbox, do
you KNOW it will work?!  Where is there the LEAST risk of inaccuracy?  This
is my new pet peeve!!!

If you don't care about OAT inaccuracy, leave the silly thing out!  If you
fly IFR you will want one.  If you need it for density altitude
calculations, then by all means don't put it where sun could hit it!!  Put
it where you KNOW it will work!!  Argh!!

do not archive
)_( Dan
RV-7 N714D
http://www.rvproject.com


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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 1:44 pm    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Actually, rather than worrying about figuring out the mach number, there is an alternative equation that uses TAS:
OAT = IOAT - K*TAS^2/7592
where:
OAT = outside air temperature in deg C
IOAT = indicated OAT in deg C
K = recovery factor of the temperature probe.  Usually around 0.95, but the value could be different.
TAS = true airspeed in knots

Kevin Horton

On 17 Jul 2006, at 15:21, LessDragProd(at)aol.com (LessDragProd(at)aol.com) wrote:
Quote:
Of course, there is always the temperature rise due to compressibility.
 
I'm surprised some of the technocrats haven't jumped in on this.  At 200 mph, it should be about 3 degrees at the stagnation point.  Or 90% of that in the boundary layer.
 
I know there is a Mach number squared term in the equation, and someone is bound to correct me that it is only a 2.45834659 degree rise.  Or some other insignificantly different number.  Smile 
Actually, 3 degrees is pretty insignificant, as long as it is consistent.
 
BTW, the RMI microencoder OAT calculates and compensates for the compressibility temperature rise.  I haven't checked into the rest, yet.
 
Regards,
Jim Ayers
 
In a message dated 07/17/2006 11:28:50 AM Pacific Daylight Time, dan(at)rvproject.com (dan(at)rvproject.com) writes:
Quote:
--> RV-List message posted by: "Dan Checkoway" <dan(at)rvproject.com (dan(at)rvproject.com)>

Quote:
People can do anything even if wrong but with the prevailing comments that
away from the engine area is best why anyone would still go against good
advise is beyond me.

Ron Lee

Well said, Ron!  If you put your OAT probe out under the wing, you KNOW it
will not suffer from any other heat source.  If you put it anywhere else,
like on the fuselage, under the HS, in your NACA vent, in your airbox, do
you KNOW it will work?!  Where is there the LEAST risk of inaccuracy?  This
is my new pet peeve!!!

If you don't care about OAT inaccuracy, leave the silly thing out!  If you
fly IFR you will want one.  If you need it for density altitude
calculations, then by all means don't put it where sun could hit it!!  Put
it where you KNOW it will work!!  Argh!!

do not archive
)_( Dan
RV-7 N714D
http://www.rvproject.com



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gmcjetpilot(at)yahoo.com
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Jul 18, 2006 1:18 am    Post subject: OAT probe position Reply with quote

Is that true or indicated? MPH or Knots? Degrees F or C?
 
>From: LessDragProd(at)aol.com
Quote:
Of course, there is always the temperature rise due to 
compressibility.

I'm surprised some of the technocrats haven't jumped
>in on this.  At  200  mph, it should be about 3 degrees

>at the stagnation point.  Or 90% of  that in the boundary
>layer.



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