Zack wrote:
This is what Thomas from Edge Performance in Norway is using. It's his personal mount and not a product that he offers. I like how it uses the Rotax ring mount design versus a bed mount.
Kai wrote: I especially like the idea from the chap in australia, who kept his Aerovee mount and made up a truss ring from square steel tubing with attachments for the isolators to go with. A while back he posted pictures on this group, and his flight reports are good.
13brv3 wrote:Kai wrote: I especially like the idea from the chap in australia, who kept his Aerovee mount and made up a truss ring from square steel tubing with attachments for the isolators to go with. A while back he posted pictures on this group, and his flight reports are good.
This is probably the mount adapter you're referring too. I thought really hard about doing something like this, but from past experience I know that all those extra bits of tubing are going to get in the way in a tight cowling.
viewtopic.php?f=60&t=579&hilit=rotax&start=10
Rusty
Herraripower wrote:Kai,
If you put the prop flange where Sonex suggests for a Rotax, you do not have to modify the cowl. They want it positioned back with a propeller spacer. I used a 2” to save any issues. As I understand it, you had some input in the design of a ring mount Rotax in a Sonex? That would be helpful if you had any pictures of your input or process of helping move that along. That might be an option for some builders wanting to try and go that route. Are you intending on installing a Rotax in your Sonex?
13brv3 wrote:
One thing I don't understand is why they're moving a lighter engine aft? It looks like the goal might have been to keep the prop in the same place for cowl purposes, but I'd think for CG purposes you'd want to move it forward. It must work out OK for CG purposes on the Sonex, or they wouldn't do it of course.
Rusty
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