wlarson861 wrote:You may have alluded to one of the problems. When I got rid of the Nikasil cylinders I think it took about 30 to 40 hours for the temps to get back to "low" They would still hit 400 to 410 on climb even solo on really hot days. When I was normally aspirated 390 was a good day climb temp at 80 OAT. Solo climbs were still around 600 fpm though with a Prince prop. Another thing I did was look at the bottom opening and realize the engine mount crosses the firewall right above the exit, I added about 1.25 inches to the opening to compensate for this and saw a slight reduction in temps. I think I suffered from too much anxiety over some things that breaking in the engine fully solved. Trying to cool a new(er) engine is just impossible until it is ready. As far as the climb performance I bit the bullet and went turbo. All My problems with cooling and climb went away and I rarely see climb temps above 380 now. It's a $4000 fix but to me was worth it, the Jab was a lot more than I was willing to go at the time.
mike.smith wrote:radfordc wrote:mike.smith wrote:- Ever since then I usually average about 4.5 gph. So to me, 4.09 gph is too lean and may be part of my heat problems. It can't hurt to check so I'll richen the mixture a bit and do some tests.
The very least fuel burn I ever saw was over 4.75 gal/hr in cruise flight at altitude with the mixture leaned severely. Making power I always saw over 5 gal/hr.
Sonex says their factory planes average 4 to 4.5 gph, so my usual numbers seem to be in line with that.
gammaxy wrote:I really wish I understood how Sonex gets 150mph at 8000 feet.
radfordc wrote:gammaxy wrote:I really wish I understood how Sonex gets 150mph at 8000 feet.
Check out Jeff Shultz's chart showing performance numbers for his plane/engine: http://www.sonex604.com/percent_power.html
He shows a TAS of 151 mph at 8000 ft.
Also note that at low altitude turning 3200 rpm requires 5 gal/hr. This is in line with what I used to see.
radfordc wrote:You math wizards will have to have a discussion among yourselves.
I do know that I admire Jeff's work and I put a lot of trust in the Sonex guys, too.
There are plenty of references about TAS and they all seem to say that TAS is faster as you go higher.
http://stoenworks.com/Tutorials/Underst ... speed.html
https://www.vatsim.net/pilot-resource-c ... -airspeeds
http://www.pprune.org/archive/index.php/t-518735.html
samiam wrote:Chris, your post uses a lot of algebra, but basically comes to the conclusion:
x = x
Or, in this case:
IAS = TAS. But science tells us that this simply isn't true.
sonex1374 wrote:Thanks for your interest in my power chart! ... Although I can't say I tested every value in the chart, I have found it to be quite close for those that I have tested.
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