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Verbitsky's geared engine
This is from an article by Bill Gieskieng in the Aug-Sept 1998 Aeromodeller, pgs 16-17, about an engine for the International power freeflight class, F1C. This is a highly developed, technically sophisticated area of competition. I think the kind of engine set up discussed here is now widely used.
Basically there is a 2.5 cc--15 size engine which unloads to as much as 33,000 RPM in the air. It is turning a planetary gear setup with 4:1 reduction to give prop RPM's around 8,000. The prop is 12.8 x 11.8 inch. Prop has calculated efficiency of 80.5%. The idea being to use the engine HP to turn a large high pich prop slowly to get the most thrust out of the power train. The gears are said to be very precise and there is little friction loss in the gear train. I thought this interesting, and wondered if anyone knew more about it. |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
I think there was a guy in upstate New York that was also developing a setup like that based on the Nelson .15 engine. I remember reading about it in MA 4 or 5 years ago.
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
The smaller displacement engines can revup more just look at the small car engines that turn those rpms. I must say that I have no desire to fly such an engine and setup as I am a very practical person and the .40/.60 size engines seem to be the most practical engines for me. The only small engine that tempts me is the little Saito 30.
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
I remember seeing a photo of a .61 two stroke belt driving a large prop on someone's pattern plane, back in the days when F3A rules limited two strokes to .61 (10 cc) and four strokes to 1.2 (20 cc) displacement. It is my opinion that unless you are restricted to a certain displacement by competition rules, it's better to just direct drive the prop with a larger engine. (the KISS rule, keep it simple, stupid!)
I even prefer direct drive on my electric planes. |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
ORIGINAL: B.L.E. unless you are restricted to a certain displacement by competition rules, These engines are different to car engines because they're making max HP at those 30-40K revs where a car engine is way past its peak HP at full revs. |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
I think F1C is down to either 4 or 5 seconds engine run these days. What kind of HP, more or less, does it take to drive that size prop at 8,000 RPM? There was a letter to the editor in Aeromodeller which showed that the downhill changes in engine run in F1C have fairly closely tracked increases in engine power.
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
ORIGINAL: Jim Thomerson I think F1C is down to either 4 or 5 seconds engine run these days. What kind of HP, more or less, does it take to drive that size prop at 8,000 RPM? There was a letter to the editor in Aeromodeller which showed that the downhill changes in engine run in F1C have fairly closely tracked increases in engine power. An APC 14x10E needs about 950 watts to turn that speed. This is probably some custom carbon fiber folding prop if it's on a competition free flight plane. |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
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Here is a picture of the geared Nelson 15
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
Looks to me like a very effective way to make the statement "If I wanted a radio controlled model airplane, I could have bought one!!":D
The rubber powered competition planes are also not cheap, especially when you consider that the rubber "motors" are only good for a few flights before strands start breaking. |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
The Neslon setup runs in the $800-$900 range. I would guess that the airplane to go behind it would be even more. They gain over 500 feet in 5 seconds and are stuffed with auto-controls to change from a vertical drag racer to glider.
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
This is why they use gears on electrics!
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
How many know that the WWII fighters used gear drives to reduce prop speed and increase prop diameter?
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
Gear/belt reduction is also very popular with homebuilt airplanes, especially when converting automobile engines to aircraft use. The Rotax two and four stroke engines all have prop speed reduction units (PSRUs) on them.
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
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The smaller displacement engines can revup more just look at the small car engines that turn those rpms. I must say that I have no desire to fly such an engine and setup as I am a very practical person and the .40/.60 size engines seem to be the most practical engines for me. The only small engine that tempts me is the little Saito 30. I remember seeing a photo of a .61 two stroke belt driving a large prop on someone's pattern plane, back in the days when F3A rules limited two strokes to .61 (10 cc) and four strokes to 1.2 (20 cc) displacement. It is my opinion that unless you are restricted to a certain displacement by competition rules, it's better to just direct drive the prop with a larger engine. (the KISS rule, keep it simple, stupid!) buzzingb... Gear reductions are not restricted to small, high revving engines. This is an OS .61. The gear reduction on this engine was before 4-strokes became common but noise issues were getting to be very restrictive. Folks figured out that the high prop tip speed was producing more noise than the engine and turning the prop slower helped. As B.L.E pointed out, rules in the pattern world at the time also partially drove the development of these engines. You did know the Satio .30 is out of production? Bill Vail www.RCScreenProtectors.com |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
Any info on what size prop that geared .61 would turn?
Listening to a high speed electric plane really lets you know just how much noise a prop can make. [link=http://flyemfast.com/files/BestVen.wmv]Electric Q-40 video[/link] |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
Any info on what size prop that geared .61 would turn? Bill Vail |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
I've seen photos of that geared OS 61 before but I just noticed something interesting in the shot of it from the exhaust side. The front housing has been rotated 90 degrees to put the carb over on the side. This alters the crank timing so the engine runs in reverse direction. The gears then have the output shaft running in the normal direction.
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RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
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ORIGINAL: B.L.E. Gear/belt reduction is also very popular with homebuilt airplanes, especially when converting automobile engines to aircraft use. The Rotax two and four stroke engines all have prop speed reduction units (PSRUs) on them. For sure, it makes lots of thrust and needs LOTS of left rudder on takeoff... I'd love to see a practical gearbox for r/c motors, as a big one turning slow can really crank out a lot thrust and is much more efficient than a small one really spinning up. But I'm sure it'd cost out the wazoo. My rear is still sore from buying this gearbox/clutch assembly you see here ;).... LS |
RE: Verbitsky's geared engine
ORIGINAL: Jim Thomerson I think F1C is down to either 4 or 5 seconds engine run these days. What kind of HP, more or less, does it take to drive that size prop at 8,000 RPM? There was a letter to the editor in Aeromodeller which showed that the downhill changes in engine run in F1C have fairly closely tracked increases in engine power. Prop geometric pitch 11.8 Prop RPM 8,000 Prop Efficiency 80% Gearing 4:1 Engine RPM 32,000 Reduction efficiency 92% Engine output 1.15 BHP Power absorbed by prop 1.06 hp Estimated thrust, sea level 7.60 lbs. Thrust velocity 90 mph Now assume it was direct drive, and your engine was still producing 1.15 BHP and you needed 90 mph thrust velocity Prop dia 6.5 Prop geometric pitch 2.95 Prop RPM 32,000 Prop Efficiency 67% Gearing 1:1 Engine RPM 32,000 Reduction efficiency 100% Engine output 1.15 BHP Power absorbed by prop 1.15 hp Estimated thrust, sea level 4.74 lbs. Thrust velocity 90 mph See the difference in thrust Now when I see that, I assume the engine is being run rather conservatively, and perhaps would have an active life of more than a few flights - very interesting -- anyone has pictures. |
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