Rynoth wrote:How many BTU's might be considered margianally effective for our small cockpit? Some brief internet searching suggests that for typical room, 34 BTU per square foot should be sufficient. The footprint of our cabin+baggage is probably less than 25sqft (with a much lower ceiling, no insulation and probably more air leakage than a room), so would 800+ BTU be a reasonable heater?
No, I'm afraid it will be a >lot< more than that.
Here are some
rough calculations:
1) If we assume our cabin/fuselage has a total surface area of bout 100 sq feet, that the thin aluminum and plexiglass has a thermal conductivity the same as glass, and that we are heating >no< outside air (i.e. zero ventilation, the radiator works using air from inside the cabin and our cabin is perfectly sealed), and we want a temperature difference of just 30 deg F (e.g outside temperature of 20 degF and we want it to be 50 degF inside), then the heat needed is 3800 BTU/hr.
2) If we make the assumptions above but include 100 CFM of outside "ventilation" (i.e. the air we are running through our heat core/radiator comes from outside the cabin), then we need 7011 BTU/hr. 100 CFM is quite low (less than a typical bathroom fan), I'd bet most Sonexes leak more air into the fuselage than that in flight even with the vents closed.
The above calculations understate the case, maybe by a lot: I've used a regular heat loss calculator (
http://www.loadcalc.net/load.php) that is designed for structures, so there's negligible moving air outside. If instead we are flying and the outside air is flowing over our aluminum skin at 100 kts, it will be losing heat a lot faster. And, as mentioned above, the amount of air moving from outside to inside in flight is probably a lot more than 100 CFM.
As a rough sanity check: A typical candle has a heat output of about 70 watts = 240 BTU/hr. So, three or four of them would provide about 800 BTU/hr. I'm sure we can all agree that burning 4 candles inside a flying Sonex would not provide a noticeable increase in the cabin temps.
Yes, it would be possible to decrease the heat loss considerably by closing off the tailcone, but it's still going to take a lot of heat to make a difference in drafty, uninsulated cockpit.
Rynoth wrote:I'm thinking of performing the following test once I have all my components... put a quart (2lbs) of hot water (maybe 180 degrees) in a thermos to simulate the catch can, run the system for 1 minute, then recheck the temperature of the water. Any reason using the BTU forumula of 1BTU = 1 degree per 1lb of water wouldn't give insight into the BTU capability of the cooling system? Obviously this would not tell us how much the engine compartment/turbo is heating the water on the other end.
Yes, that would give you an idea of how much heat your "core" would be putting out into the cabin. Be sure to keep your units straight: You'll be measuring the BTUs moved by the heating system over the time you are running the rig, and the heat loss numbers above are in BTU/HR. So, if for example, you find the heater core moves 120 BTU in 6 minutes, multiply by 10 to get 1200 BTU/Hr. I think you'll need many gallons of water to get useful information, maybe fill up a 10-20 gallon picnic cooler, let it run for a few minutes to take the lines and radiator up to temp, then start your measurements to learn how much heat is taken out of the water after x minutes. The difference in heat lost through the walls of the picnic cooler vs a thermos bottle won't be a significant source of error over short time periods, both would be swamped by the heat removed through the "radiator."