by vigilant104 » Wed Nov 30, 2016 7:16 pm
Mark,
Is the BSFC (i.e fuel burn per HP) significantly different between the Corvair, the turbo Aerovee, the CAMit, or any other options? I'm not talking about the claims of companies or fans, I'm talking real-world numbers. My guess would be that it is not, that any air cooled recip engine will burn the "standard" .45 - .48 lb/hr/HP for this type of engine. That's what Lycomings get, Continentals get, VWs get--any air-cooled reciprocating engine. If this is correct, then you may find that, if you need to go 150 MPH TAS and do it for 2 hours and have fuel in reserve, then you'll need to carry more gas than a standard Waiex tank holds. Is installing/carrying an aux tank incompatible with your mission (i.e. would carrying 5 extra gallons cut into your required payload too much?)
For consideration: I can go 125 MPH with my standard Aerovee and go 300 miles on one tank, with reserve (if no unfavorable winds). And I'm sure my plane is not the fastest Sonex with a stock Aerovee. The difference in flight time between 125 MPH and 150 MPH cruise speed for a 300 mile trip (disregarding climb, descent,etc) is about 24 minutes, in the real world it would be even less. Obviously, it is your call and everyone is different, but if I did the math on the number of dollars spent for every minute saved, I'd probably settle for a slightly lower cruise speed and save the $10K+ spent in changing the original engine. Heck, just the increased fuel burn will cost about $1 for every minute I would have saved on that 300 mile trip (if the diff is 4 gallons of 100LL). That's if cruise speed is the only factor I'm considering. But, again, everyone has unique priorities.
In the situation you are in right now (money spent already for the new CAMIT that has probably decreased in value by a bit, a perfectly good Turbo Aerovee with prop still on hand), I'm not sure which way I'd go. But I'm sure I'd think really hard before buying yet another engine.
Mark Waldron
Sonex 1230 (Builder: Jay Gibbs)
Aerovee, Trigear