Safest engine available in my price range! Scanning the NTSB site gives accident data for various engines that were available to me for this air frame in the price range I could afford. There are various ways to slice and dice the numbers so absolutes as far as true reliability are hard to measure. At the end of the day the Corvair came out ahead of any of the competitors in the price range that I was working with. From 2001-2017 the NTSB site list 14 accidents when the word “Corvair” is used in the word string box with all others blank (one was for a certified aircraft using a Corvair fuel pump). Remember that Corvair engines are used on many different types of air frames including Zenith 601, 650, 701, 750, KR’s, Peitenpols, Dragonfly, Panthers, Cleanex, and countless other aircraft since 1960 when a Corvair first flew on a Pietenpol.
As there have been many versions of flying VW, Subaru & Honda engines so there have been variations of the Corvair conversion process. Nevertheless my goal was to find out the reliability and failure rate of the particular conversion I was interested in as opposed to all other choices I could afford at the time. One of the biggest advantages I had was my previous experience with a factory VW conversion on this air frame for a number of years. It isn’t my purpose to criticize the factory offering so I’ll focus on what makes this particular Corvair conversion and its reliability so attractive for me:
• Simplicity! No need for a radiator, water hoses, water pump, cooling fan, gearbox, turbo, fuel pump, or oil cooler lines.
• It doesn’t overheat. CHTs are less than 300ºF in cruise. Oil Temps (using the stock GM cooler) are 180-220ºF.
• The Marvel Schebler aircraft carb is excellent in operation. It doesn’t hesitate, stumble, bumble, or burp.
• It does not use or leak oil. Viton seals on the pushrod tubes seal tightly and are very resistant to heat.
• It has an oil fed front bearing (5th bearing) attached to the case for prop loads.
• The hydraulic valves stay adjusted after the initial setting during the engine build.
• No head retorquing required.
• Dual ignition based on the original GM designed distributor system that advances the timing as needed for flight.
• Ignition coils that are mounted away from the engine and don’t suffer from exposure to extreme heat.
• Ignition timing is set and checked at condition inspection with an automotive timing light using factory timing marks.
• Dual fuel piston design allows the use of 100LL or 93 octane auto fuel. Ethanol free is preferred but not required.
Modern Corvair engine conversions have proven themselves to be reliable, provide good smooth power, and are quite robust. The simplicity of this well-designed, air-cooled, direct drive, naturally aspired conversion is a major part of the reason that it is as dependable as it has proven to be. Another builder makes a valid point when he insists, “If it’s not there, it cost nothing, weighs nothing, and is 100% reliable.”
Like any engine it requires regular maintenance. But with hydraulic lifters, Viton pushrod seals (no oil leaks), iridium plugs, dual ignition, certified aircraft carb, and the use of K&N high quality oil & air filters, maintenance mostly consist of oil & filter changes at 25 hours and new spark plugs during the condition inspection if needed.
Corvair reliability is a safety factor that should not be dismissed. Many things make it reliable but one of the most notable is that it is not being strained to put out an amount of power it was never designed for. In its original role the later engines were rated up to 180 HP at 5600 RPM. To ask a modern updated & de-rated version of this engine to now give 90 HP at 2800 RPM falls well within the original design specifications and greatly enhances the reliability factor.
Dale Williams
N319WF @ 6J2
Myunn - "daughter of Cleanex"
120 HP - 3.0 Corvair
Tail Wheel - Center Stick
Signature Finish 2200 Paint Job
172.6 hours / Status - Flying
Member # 109 - Florida Sonex Association
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