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fun and games with a manometer

 
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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Sat May 28, 2011 12:35 pm    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

I built a U-tube water manometer this week, and finally got a chance
to try it out (flying) today. Prior to today, I had used it to find a
slight leak in my pitot system, which I fixed by tightening up the
Nylo-Seal fittings while watching the indicated leak disappear. Ever
wonder how much tightening is enough for those fittings? I have, and
now I know....just use a manometer on the system during the assembly
of the fittings, and you'll know when to quit tightening.

Today, I got a chance to fly briefly to test the Jabiru-dictated 2.4"
of water column difference between the inlet air ducts (each side
tested individually), and the exit-air area of the plane. I haven't
had any cooling problems, so I just wanted to test how close my
installation came to meeting that 2.4" measurement. My installation
was pretty close to right on the mark...it read about 2.3" to 2.6"
depending on the bounce of the water in the tube. Pretty happy with
that, I flew home to add a 1" lip to the bottom of my cowl exit. I
bent a 20" length of sheet aluminum to a 60° angle, letting 1" stick
out into the airstream below the cowl, and c-clamped it in place. (I
didn't want to rivet it in place just to test the theory.) I went up
and flew some more...windy day, didn't want to fly too much....and
now I saw about 2.5" to 3" on either of the two air ducts. But the
really interesting thing about the last test, was that I saw a mark
on the aluminum "lip" showing where it was contacting the left
exhaust pipe. Normally, this pipe cleared the cowl/lip by about 1/2",
but apparently during flight, my cowl flexes up enough to allow
contact with the exhaust pipe. No big deal you say, and I agree, but
if that lip is flexing up 1/2", what just happened to the carefully
engineered 3:1 ratio of exit air-to-inlet air that shouldn't change?
Kinda like having a wrong-way operating cowl flap for the exit air,
I'm thinking. So I need to stiffen up the lower cowl exit flange so
that it doesn't flex at all, and then do some more testing....maybe a
center support for the cowl is in order...something that will be
permanently attached to either the cowl or the airframe, but not
both, so as to allow for removing the cowl without having to deal
with another fastener down there.

If anybody's having trouble with overheating issues, yet you're sure
of the "correctness" of your installation, you might think about the
rigidity of things when air pressure gets applied.

Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062
Prince prop (64 x 30, P-tip)
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1110 hrs (since
3-27-2006)


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Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM
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PostPosted: Sat May 28, 2011 8:28 pm    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

Lynn,
Are you certain that the engine torque at max throttle does not rotate the engine in it's mounts far enough to cause contact with the cowl?
G.Aman








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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Sun May 29, 2011 2:19 am    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

Absolutely, positively, pretty damn certain that isn't happening, G.
This is a 4-cylinder Jabiru after all, and it doesn't move hardly at
all, let alone 1/2"+ of movement. The cowl flex is the culprit. This
cowl is a Skyfox cowl, and is unsupported across the whole bottom of
the exit-air opening. It has a built-in lip of about 1", but it's
only at about a 15-degree angle to the rest of the cowl, so it
doesn't offer a lot in the way of stiffening.

Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062
Prince prop (64 x 30, P-tip)
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1110 hrs (since
3-27-2006)


On May 29, 2011, at 12:24 AM, zeprep251(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:
Lynn,
Are you certain that the engine torque at max throttle does not
rotate the engine in it's mounts far enough to cause contact with
the cowl?
G.Aman



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Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM
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PostPosted: Sun May 29, 2011 7:52 am    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

Lynn,
Just a thought.My 2200 is a pusher and I have to rotate the mounts in their sockets every couple years because they take a set that can be seen easily,especially the fronts.It drops the engine almost 1/4 "Do you have dyna-focal mounts in the Kit-Fox? .


G.Aman






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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Sun May 29, 2011 10:33 am    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

They are not dyna-focal, but almost...the mounting bolts point
straight ahead, so the rubbers sit vertically, and the holes through
them, horizontally. I changed rubbers for the very reason you
described....sag. The rubbers I got from USJabiru are soft, while
ones I got from Sonex (and subsequently removed right after
installation) are hard as a rock, and transmit vibrations. I went
back to the Jabiru-supplied rubbers after feeling vibrations from the
others. Last June I had the engine out for work, and the new
rubbers...then a year old, and now two years old, are still without
the tell-tale signs of needing to be rotated or replaced. The first
set I used for 3 years and they were distorted when I finally
scrapped them.

I made a brace today to keep the lower edge of the cowl from blowing
upward and diminishing the exit-air area. It works well, but didn't
make a lot of difference in the readings I was getting with the
manometer. The 2.45-3.0" figure still stands....hard to nail the
figure down because of the bounce of the liquid in the manometer. But
the numbers are bearing out the validity of doing this test, coupled
with the very good CHT temperatures....287-304 degrees F. during
today's flight, and that's pretty typical. OAT today is 79 F.

Looking back at the temporary lip that I made....1" deep, 20" long,
and at a 60-degree angle to the wind...might have been what caused
the cowl to deform and touch the exhaust pipe. After all, that's a
pretty good "airbrake" sticking down into the airstream, and being
mounted to a flexible cowl, it would want to take the easy route and
deflect upwards to avoid the wind.

Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062
Prince prop (64 x 30, P-tip)
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1110 hrs (since
3-27-2006)
On May 29, 2011, at 11:49 AM, zeprep251(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:
Lynn,
Just a thought.My 2200 is a pusher and I have to rotate the mounts
in their sockets every couple years because they take a set that
can be seen easily,especially the fronts.It drops the engine almost
1/4 "Do you have dyna-focal mounts in the Kit-Fox? .

G.Aman



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_________________
Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM
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BobsV35B(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Sun May 29, 2011 11:11 am    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

Good Afternoon Lynn,

You mentioned that you used a sixty degree lip. Seems to me I once read that anything beyond thirty degrees of "lip" actually decreases the airflow. It causes too much turbulence in the area. No knowledge from me. just a memory from a long time ago.

Happy Skies,

Old Bob

Do Not Archive

In a message dated 5/29/2011 1:33:13 P.M. Central Daylight Time, lynnmatt(at)jps.net writes:
Quote:
--> JabiruEngine-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>

They are not dyna-focal, but almost...the mounting bolts point
straight ahead, so the rubbers sit vertically, and the holes through
them, horizontally. I changed rubbers for the very reason you
described....sag. The rubbers I got from USJabiru are soft, while
ones I got from Sonex (and subsequently removed right after
installation) are hard as a rock, and transmit vibrations. I went
back to the Jabiru-supplied rubbers after feeling vibrations from the
others. Last June I had the engine out for work, and the new
rubbers...then a year old, and now two years old, are still without
the tell-tale signs of needing to be rotated or replaced. The first
set I used for 3 years and they were distorted when I finally
scrapped them.

I made a brace today to keep the lower edge of the cowl from blowing
upward and diminishing the exit-air area. It works well, but didn't
make a lot of difference in the readings I was getting with the
manometer. The 2.45-3.0" figure still stands....hard to nail the
figure down because of the bounce of the liquid in the manometer. But
the numbers are bearing out the validity of doing this test, coupled
with the very good CHT temperatures....287-304 degrees F. during
today's flight, and that's pretty typical. OAT today is 79 F.

Looking back at the temporary lip that I made....1" deep, 20" long,
and at a 60-degree angle to the wind...might have been what caused
the cowl to deform and touch the exhaust pipe. After all, that's a
pretty good "airbrake" sticking down into the airstream, and being
mounted to a flexible cowl, it would want to take the easy route and
deflect upwards to avoid the wind.

Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062
Prince prop (64 x 30, P-tip)
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1110 hrs (since
3-27-2006)
On May 29, 2011, at 11:49 AM, zeprep251(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:
Lynn,
Just a thought.My 2200 is a pusher and I have to rotate the mounts
in their sockets every couple years because they take a set that
can be seen easily,especially the fronts.It drops the engine almost
1/4 "Do you have dyna-focal mounts in the Kit-Fox? .

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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Mon May 30, 2011 4:57 am    Post subject: fun and games with a manometer Reply with quote

Hi Bob-
You're probably right about the 60° lip, and I can't find the source
of where I got that notion. I just checked the Bingelis books, and it
wasn't there. Plus, a 60° lip looks out of place and draggy. I did
the one flight with the "lip" and removed it, proving nothing.
Yesterday I built a brace that screws to the firewall, and projects
down to contact the cowl, and this will keep the cowl from being
blown upwards, if indeed it ever was (without the added lip, that
is). This provides two things....it keeps the cowl a bit further away
from the pipes, and provides a fixed outlet area, not a variable one.

Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062
Prince prop (64 x 30, P-tip)
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1110 hrs (since
3-27-2006)
On May 29, 2011, at 3:08 PM, BobsV35B(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:
Good Afternoon Lynn,

You mentioned that you used a sixty degree lip. Seems to me I once
read that anything beyond thirty degrees of "lip" actually
decreases the airflow. It causes too much turbulence in the area.
No knowledge from me. just a memory from a long time ago.

Happy Skies,

Old Bob


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_________________
Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM
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