Robby,
If you are interested in EFI on an AeroVee VW you may find some useful information contained in SonexFlight Episode 35. Our Australian Friends have converted several of their AeroVees to EFI and that episode discusses some of the factors involved.
SonexFlight.com/35
I have been working on this myself and hope to install an EFI system on an AeroVee in the future - it's an intriguing project and I'm very curious to learn more. However, it's a lot of work to sort everything out, fabricate the parts, and then ultimately tune the system to work well. It would be a mistake to underestimate the scope and effort required in such a project.
I'd encourage you to think about your goals for the EFI project. If the goal is for the mentors to learn about converting an existing VW conversion to use EFI, then that might be best done separate from the youth project, then brought back to them after it's fully developed to teach the kids everything you've learned. If the goal is to develop a superior VW engine that uses EFI, that also might best be done separate from a youth project and/or a new airframe construction project. If the goal is to concurrently build an airframe, create a new VW conversion using a hybridized design from existing conversions, develop an EFI/EI adaptation for the new engine, and do this in front of youth as a teaching opportunity, you may be launching an overly ambitious project.
To answer your original questions, see my comments below.
N418SX wrote:1. Due to the need to teach, we want to assemble the engine on site, and as donated funding/parts become available. If viable, is there a best/brand/route/way to do achieve our teaching objectives while moving forward on budget?
I don't think there is a *best* brand of VW conversion. All the current offerings have proven fairly reliable. They each have differing approaches to the conversion, and that drives the parts they source or produce themselves. One thing they all have in common is that the current version is NOT the version they started with - each engine has evolved over time. Should you decide to design your own conversion, or hybridize existing designs, you'll need to have a plan for developing, refining, and evolving your new engine.
Depending on the exact nature of your teaching objectives, it may be better to teach the kids using a proven, exiting model of engine, and stick to the roadmap already laid down. Effectively, this will limit the ability to use substitute parts (such as what you may find locally, or those donated that are *similar, but not exact*. The most cost effective way to move forward on a budget is to find a good deal on an AeroVee/GP/Revmaster/Hummel, then rebuild it with the kids.
N418SX wrote:2. With a possibility of local part donations, are there parts that we can source locally and use say in a GP or similar engine build? And, maybe more importantly are there parts that absolutely should not be sourced locally.
I would only use parts called for by the conversion manual or company producing your engine. Substituting parts is tricky, and can have unintended consequences. These are often not obvious until the parts are in service and building hours - only then do we fully understand that those parts were not up to the task, and were not good substitutes (MoFoCo heads, for example). Great Plains, Revmaster, Hummel, Valley Engineering and AeroConversions could probably provide you with a list of all the parts they bought, tested, and ultimately rejected for one reason or another, but that's part of their intellectual property, and I don't think they'll want to share that.
N418SX wrote:3. Are there any Aero VW construction manuals available that can be used to teach young people while building a safe, adequately powered, aero VW engine?
I'm not aware of a conversion manual available for the VW. There are some old Sport Aviation articles (from the 60's) that talk about conversions, there are assembly manuals by GP, AeroVee and others, and there are conversion manuals for 1/2 VWs. Those resources might be of use to you in developing your own conversion.
N418SX wrote:4. As we plan to use the SDS EI/EFI systems on our engine, is anyone out there flying this set up that would be willing, some day to be a resource for us?
None that I can readily think of. Perhaps SDS can assist.
I think what your team is trying to accomplish is absolutely wonderful. Using a Sonex to introduce kids to aviation is a fantastic fit! But just like it may be better to leverage the design work and refinement already done by the airframe designer, it may also be better to leverage an existing engine. Find one used and that will be the cheapest, easiest, and most reliable way to build a great airplane, teach kids about aviation, and ensure you have a safe, fun airplane when you're done. Even if you purchase a running VW that performs like a Swiss watch, you can always tear it apart and put it back together again to accomplish your teaching objective, and the kids will love it all the same!
I look forward to hearing more about your youth project, and maybe we can use your successes to help start more of these projects around the country.
Jeff