T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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123.1 | | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Wed Apr 08 1987 15:56 | 8 |
|
Dan, I really think that a .20 sized engine is to small.
If your going with a four stroker then I wouldn't go with
anything less than a .40/4. Don't just look at this plane
alone. Look at what else the engine could be utilized in.
I myself would use a 46 enya or the 49 OS.
Tom
|
123.2 | How bout this one! | FROST::SOUTIERE | | Thu Apr 09 1987 08:23 | 6 |
| A friend of mine just purchased a home-made plane from a friend.
The wing span is 6' and the fuse is about 50". I don't think it
weighs more then 3lbs. He wants to know what size engine to buy
for it. I'm not really sure. What does the world of rc think?
Ken
|
123.3 | | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Thu Apr 09 1987 10:15 | 10 |
| Need more data. Ie,
Glider type plane?
Wing foil type?
Construction?
Fuse frontal area
etc,etc,etc
Tom
|
123.4 | | FROST::SOUTIERE | | Thu Apr 09 1987 15:13 | 13 |
| I'll do my best to describe this monster!
It is a high wing (wing is flat bottom with very little dihedral),
the fuse resembles the Eaglet 63 and is about 50" long. Its made
up of balsa plywood *(the plane is solid)*, and the engine compartment
is only enclosed by the sides(typical setup). Its been flown before
but he doesn't know what size engine was in it. Again, the wing
is 6'long and measures about 18" across. Weight is approx. 3 lbs.
Does this help? (I'm not that up on my terms so bear with me)
Ken
|
123.5 | Maybe an OS .40 FS | HPSCAD::WFIELD | | Thu Apr 09 1987 15:30 | 3 |
| What you are describing does'nt sound all that different from
my Kadet Sr. It flys real well with an OS .40 four stroke.
Wayne
|
123.6 | Some questions | LEDS::ZAYAS | | Thu Apr 09 1987 16:14 | 3 |
| That 3lbs without any engine, right?
What's the aspect ratio of the wing?
|
123.7 | Scale reference | SNOV17::BROWNTONY | Tony Brown | Thu Apr 09 1987 19:28 | 37 |
|
re .0
The following table is from "Radio Control Scale Aircraft" by Gordon
Whitehead. It's an English book, so the loadings may vary from
USA practice. Note the power loadings are for 2 strokes. I leave
it to you to extrapolate to 4 strokes. Note the book was written
in 1980, so it is reasonably current.
TYPE OF MODEL WING LOADING POWER LOADING EXAMPLES
Vintage 12-14 oz/sq ft 260-300 oz/cu in Antionette
Avro
Homebuilt 14-16 230-260 Jodel
WW1 bomber DH9
Biplane trainer Tiger_Moth
1920's light Moths
WW1 fighter 15-20 230-260 Camel
Lightplane Cessnas
Trainer (light monoplane) Chipmunk
1920s/1930s fighter CurtisHawks
Aerobatic 20-25 215-260 Jungmeister
Racer Cosmic_Wind
Advanced trainer
WW11 fighter Tomahawk
Jet - prop driven 25-28 215-250 F86D
- ducted fan 25-28 200-230 F16
Some readers may not agree with the exact numbers, but this is a
good starting point.
Good luck.
Tony.
|
123.8 | | FROST::SOUTIERE | | Fri Apr 10 1987 07:44 | 2 |
|
What do you mean by "aspect ratio"?
|
123.10 | | FROST::SOUTIERE | | Fri Apr 10 1987 13:24 | 7 |
|
Hmmmmm.....
The wingspan is 6'.
The chord (if this is from the leading edge of the wing to the trailing
edge of the wing) is approx. 18". What's the ratio??? 4 to 1 ???
|
123.12 | Yup, she's a big'n! | FROST::SOUTIERE | | Mon Apr 13 1987 07:44 | 5 |
|
I told you this thing was big! Again, it is home made, no plans
or anything. So what size engine would be suitable for a monster
like that?
|
123.13 | Engine size??? | POLAR::SIBILLE | | Mon Jan 04 1993 12:52 | 5 |
| I have read thru this note but cannot find the answer to my question
: How do you guys size up an engine for a scratch build airplane.
Jacques
|
123.14 | As big as you can fit! :) | WMOIS::WEIER | Wings are just a place to hang Ailerons | Mon Jan 04 1993 13:53 | 1 |
|
|
123.15 | I was going to resist | GAUSS::REITH | Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Mon Jan 04 1993 14:03 | 5 |
| "You were going to add nose weight anyway so why not make it useful" 8^)
One method is to look at similar style planes in catalogs and see what they
recommend for engines for something with similar wing area and weight. If they
give a range, choose the largest 8^)
|
123.16 | Out of time.... | CSTEAM::HENDERSON | Competition is Fun: Dtn 297-6180, MRO4 | Mon Jan 04 1993 14:46 | 25 |
| I can hear the groans as I try to answer this question. I'm known for
usually doubling the size of any engine but for you I'll be good.
As always the question promotes a question. "What performance do you
want/need?".
(I always need a pure vertical climb. so I use a weight of the
model vs the thrust rating of the engine of greater than 1-1).
Back to the question:-
The easy answer is to copy. There are so many models out there that it
is relatively easy to find one like the one you intend to build.
Most of these models will have a range of engine sizes.
When I design a plane I calculate the wing area and decide what wing
loading I want. I usually chose 24 oz per sq ft for a pattern plane and
as little as 11 oz per sq ft for a fun-fly plane. The trick is to get a
as low a wing loadin for as big an engine as possible without making a
plane that has too much drag.
As usual not a definitive answer but a clue or two, I hope..
E.
|
123.17 | For 1/5 scale Fokker D-23 | POLAR::SIBILLE | | Tue Jan 05 1993 09:41 | 14 |
|
OK, OK
My intent is to design scale model of twin engine aircrafts. The first
one I would like to attempt is the Fokker D-23, which is a pull/push
twin. I would like to make it 1/5 scale which would bring the wing
span to about 91" the cord being about 16". As for weight, I have no
idea. I will try making the shape totally in foam, reenforce with
Fiberglass. For engine I have a choice between single engine with gear
and shaft going to the back for the push prop or twin engine. I have
no idea of what kind of horsepower/rpm I need. Performance, I'd like
the plane to at least be able to perform like the real one does.
Jacques
|
123.18 | Copying works as Eric suggested | STOHUB::JETRGR::EATON | Dan Eaton St.Louis,MO,USA, 445-6522 | Tue Jan 05 1993 10:54 | 36 |
| Designing twins eh? I've done a lot of research on the subject. I've got a pair
of 25FPs that I was looking for a home for. I took the RCM plans catalog and
searched out every twin in the book and wrote down the wing loading and span
for each design. It's amazing how much they varied. The biggest wingspan was
72 inches and the highest loading was in the 32 oz range.
Somewhere back in RCM one of the guru's published a rule of thumb type formula
relating engine displacement to plane weight I think. I plugged the info I had
gathered into the formula and it seemed to make sence. You have to figure a twin
as a bit larger than the equivalent single. As an example, Two .25's really add
up to about a single .60 vs a .50. That's due to the fact that two .25's swing
more effective prop area than a single .50 can.
I ended up deciding to build the P-38 that was published in RCM a few years back.
However, since it was designed for .15's I decided to enlarge the plans a bit
to match the fuselage to the engines better. I followed Eric's suggestion of
copying by taking a close look at the Wing Manufacturing short kit for the P-38.
They specify an engine size of .25 to .45 for their P-38. The test kit in RCM
was flown with a pair of .25FSR's and had plenty of power. I blew up my plans
to just a bit under the specs for the Wing kit. That should be pretty close I
think with a comfortable margin for error.
> no idea of what kind of horsepower/rpm I need. Performance, I'd like
> the plane to at least be able to perform like the real one does.
Something else to keep in mind. Somewhere in this file Al Casey made the comment
that most people have unrealistic expectations for the performance capabilities
of full size planes, especially warbirds. We usually give them far better
performance than a full size could ever achieve. With that in mind I'd try for
something that would give me realistic performance at 1/2 throttle and extra
performance at full throttle for getting you out of tricky situations. You can
always throttle back.
Model Aviation had a German WWII vintage push-pull plan about three years ago.
It might give you some ideas.
|
123.19 | Found some answer | POLAR::SIBILLE | | Tue Jan 05 1993 19:13 | 17 |
| Found two things.
1) In the June 1991 issue of RCModeler on page 4 there is an add for
a Beach D-18 twin engine which has 114" span and use two Q35 or G38.
So it look like what I need is two of ither one in mine. I could make
mine 1/4 scale and get 113.5" span and use the same engines.
2) In the "Standard Handbook for Mechanical Engineer" they do tie in
power requirements with weight, wing area and drag and offer a serie
of equations to calculate the power needed for a particular design.
After I have mine on paper I will try to calculate what power I should
need according to these equations and see if they can be applied to
Scale Planes.
Jacques
|
123.20 | Another possible solution | POLAR::SIBILLE | | Fri Jan 08 1993 13:09 | 17 |
|
I just tought of another solution to find the power requirements for a
scale aircraft. Let me know what you guys think of it. Theorically
when you reduce the size of an vehicul and want to keep the same
proportional performance you should reduce the power by the same level
as you reduce the volume of the vehicul. So if I do 1/4 scale, surfaces
are reduce by 1/16 and volume by 1/64 therefore I need 1/64 of the
original power of the airplane. For example, a Beech Bonanza B36TC has
300hp engine which means that a 1/4 scale of the airplane would need
4.7hp. Is this reasonable for a 113" span scale aircraft.
Maybe we can add a correction factor because we don't need a comperable
usefull load.
Jacques
|
123.21 | Check out the past "Scale views" articles | STOHUB::JETRGR::EATON | Dan Eaton St.Louis,MO,USA, 445-6522 | Fri Jan 08 1993 14:07 | 4 |
| I was looking thru the last year's RCMs for something else and I noticed that
Col. Art Johnson had a discussion or two about choosing the right engine size
in his "Scale views" column. If you don't have them I'd be glad to copy them
and send them to you.
|
123.22 | In what months | POLAR::SIBILLE | | Tue Jan 12 1993 06:55 | 4 |
| Thanks, which RCM contain these article I don't have the ful year
Jacques
|
123.23 | Searching ......please wait.......8^) | STOHUB::JETRGR::EATON | Dan Eaton St.Louis,MO,USA, 445-6522 | Tue Jan 12 1993 13:00 | 3 |
| RE: -.1
I'll take a loo tonight and let you know.
|
123.24 | a friend has one... | KBOMFG::KNOERLE | | Thu Jan 14 1993 06:53 | 7 |
|
A friend of mine built a push pull WWII airplane with around 90"
wingspan. He put in A Super Tigre 2500 in Front and a Webra 60 (I
think) in the rear end. Sufficient performance on the Super Tigre,
better performance with both. plane weights around 24 pounds.
Bernd
|
123.25 | | MKOTS3::MARRONE | | Thu Jun 30 1994 14:14 | 32 |
| I'm scratch building the big Ziroli Taube to fly at Rhinebeck this
year. I'm trying to decide on the size engine to use. I want to go
4-stroke, and have narrowed it down to the OS 70 or OS 90 Surpass.
Here are some parameters:
Wingspan: 88"
Wing Area: can't remember off the top, but I'd estimate 1200 -1300 sq in
Airfoil: flat-bottom
Weight: between 8 - 10 lbs, but I build heavy, so lets say 10 lbs
Wing Loading: about 17-20 oz/sq-ft
Flight Performance: it doesn't have to be aerobatic or have vertical
performance. Takeoffs should be fairly quick, ie 50 feet, slow flight
is very important for bomb drops, balloon breaks, and spot landings.
It should have enough power to get out of trouble quickly, but it
doesn't have to fly fast.
Question: will the OS70 Surpass be enough engine? I'd prefer to go
this route if possible since I don't want to overpower this plane. But
if it will be _very_ marginal, I need to know this now and go for the
larger engine.
OS 90 weighs only 2 oz more than the OS 70, so there isn't much of a
weight penalty for more power, but there sure is a price penalty!
Any comments?
Joe, who-is-ready-to-lay-out-hard-cash-for-another-engine (groan!)
|
123.26 | Go for the 91!. | CSTEAM::HENDERSON | Competition is Fun: Dtn 297-6180, MRO4 | Thu Jun 30 1994 14:34 | 13 |
| The 91 would be a better route. I found mine to be an excellent
performer. Charlie Nelson used one in his previous Top-Gun winning
Waco. The engine has a great idle and very good throttle transition.
I have observed the 70 Surpass on several occasions and though it runs
well it does not seem to be as proportionally powerful.
How much is a new OS91 Surpass these days?.
Regards,
Eric.
|
123.27 | $300 | WMOIS::WEIER | Keep those wings spinning! | Thu Jun 30 1994 15:43 | 1 |
|
|
123.28 | | WRKSYS::REITH | Jim WRKSYS::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Thu Jun 30 1994 16:13 | 1 |
| Unless Dave Walter goes with you 8^)
|
123.29 | | LEVERS::WALTER | | Thu Jun 30 1994 22:57 | 4 |
| Arrrrggh!!! Why did you have to remind me that I could have had a
.91 for the price of a .70? *Grumble, grumble*
|
123.30 | Another wrinkle to deal with | MKOTS3::MARRONE | | Tue Jul 05 1994 13:48 | 20 |
| Well, the plot thickens.
A member of my club has offered me his NIB Saito FA80 for $200. Now
I'm going crazy trying to decide which way to go. Here's what's on the
table right now.
FS-70 Surpass NIB 1.1 Hp $190
FS-91 Surpass Used 1.6 Hp $220
FA80 Saito NIB 1.3 Hp $200
I am not familiar with the Saito line since nobody at my field flys one
of these engines. WHat is the scoop on Saito?? Anyone have any
experience with them? Has anyone seen an engine review on the Saito
FA80?
As usual, any help will be appreciated.
-Joe
|
123.31 | My 2 cents | SNAX::SMITH | I FEEL THE NEED | Tue Jul 05 1994 21:20 | 9 |
| The 70 surpass is right in the middle of nothing plane wise. I'm not
even shure why OS made it. I wouldn't use it for more than replacing
a 45/46 2 stroke.
Saito is supposed to be good, but as you noted, you'll get no local
help. I don't even know anyone in the CMRCM club that flies anything
with a Saito.
I'd go with the 91 surpass in a heartbeat.
|
123.32 | Ditto the previous reply | ANGLIN::SPOHR | | Wed Jul 06 1994 11:28 | 9 |
| I've owned Saito and O.S. (the .91-4 in particular).
As the the previous reply said about O.S. .91's - "In a heartbeat."
Saito is O.K., but I feel you get better performance, reliability, and
all around less fuss with the O.S. Surpass series engines.
Another 2 cents...
|
123.33 | .70 has its place, go with the .91 | WMOIS::WEIER | Keep those wings spinning! | Wed Jul 06 1994 11:51 | 18 |
|
The O.S. 70 fits a very specific nitch. It works out great for planes
like the Goldberg Cub, the Great Planes Decathalon, the SIG
Citabria, etc where the 4 stroke type of power better matches the
planes characteristics than a .46 2 stroke. It also works well in some
Telemasters, Kadets, etc where a .91 would really be a bit too much
(Did I say that? :).
I have had a .70, and it runs as well as the .91 Surpass, but for
overall versatility and power, the .91 is the way to go. As Joe has
said though, a .70 might be a bit taxed in a 10.5 pound Taube.
I have no experience with Saito, but the previous comments regarding
the Saito's are consistent with what I have heard about them.
Joe is also fighting another variable here. The specific Saito he can
purchase is the "Gold" edition. The engine is black with "gold"
rocker covers, etc, and would look GREAT in the Taube.
|
123.34 | An additional 2 centsw | SNAX::SMITH | I FEEL THE NEED | Wed Jul 06 1994 12:22 | 12 |
| Joe,
I think your choice is really very simple. If you want to go for
the LOOKS and take a chance on performance, then go with the Saito.
Like I said earlier, I havn't really heard anything bad about Saito
(except) for the twin. So you might be ok and get good looks AND good
performance.
If, however, you want a good reliable engine that isn't going to let
you down and possibly destroy your new scale project, then go with the
91. I've been through enough engine headaches that I'll go with
performance and reliability anytime.
|
123.35 | | WRKSYS::REITH | Jim WRKSYS::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Wed Jul 06 1994 13:51 | 4 |
| John (wrksys::) Carl has a Saito .50 that he likes. MAN this month (August) has
a review of one of their twins
Jim
|
123.36 | my favorite... | GALVIA::ECULLEN | It will never fly, Wright ! | Thu Jul 07 1994 06:09 | 4 |
| I'm another for the 91, having two of them for some years. As has been
said before they are reliable power houses.
Eric.
|