by Zach Grant L1011jock » Fri Feb 18, 2011 2:16 pm
Steen,
Check the Lyc. parts book. The crank for the LIO is different. The oil capilaries are drilled opposite angles from a normal rotation engine, and the crank is over 10K alone if one is available (learned this by personal wallet impact). As for the time since overerhaul, I agree, 2500 hrs should be a good number for an engine that has flown regularly and doesn't have more than about 15 yrs since it was opened up last. If it has been longer calendar time, then the operating time is reduced significantly due to inactivity.
As for the gens vs alternators, absolutely, correct in the fact a plane with a totally dead battery can get the generators to charge, where an alternator equipped aircraft will not. This assumes that the battery relay can be pulled, and that the power being generated can get to the battery (otherwise you have a hot bus, but no battery in the circuit as a capaciter, and it can also cause mayham on radios and other electronic devices). Different airplanes are wired differently, and as such, getting a jump in a B or later, and some 4 window models are also this way, won't bring the battery online. If you have a generator equipped plane, they will continue to produce power. If something happenes to the alternator charge (over volt etc) and it kicks off, with no charge in the battery, total electrical failure. Even if it is as simple as pulling the battery, and hooking it up to some jumper cables from a running car, and let the car charge the battery for a half hour or so, it is much more desireable to getting a jump on a flat battery, and then trying to go fly, regardless of the charging system in the airplane. Its all about acceptable risk, and to me, Ill find a courtesy car and some jumper cables and delay an hr.
All, here is a special treat, since acel/stop distance came up, attached are the charts! All that is fine and good IF you actually keep the plane on the ground to 90 mph (which is very difficult to do). Once airborne, all bets are off. Since most of the time twincos like to come off at 80-85 (especially at lighter weights) regardless what you do besides a wheelbarrow event, I tend to look at the time period between 80 and 90 as the ground effect time, and by the time you exit ground effect, the gear is coming up, you have 90+ mph and are accelerating to 105 very quickly. 90 is actually Vxse so the plane will continue to fly and accelerate if it isn't too hot, heavy or high, as long as it is clean! I say all this for the point that using the 90 mph accel/stop chart is optomistic to say the least. The 90mph chart should be about 500' longer minimum in my opinion for real world ops, but at that point you are flying and all bets are off anyway! The 80 mph chart is much more realistic, as most have not left the ground by 80 unless on a max effort, and that is a whole different discussion! Enjoy.
-Zach
- Attachments
-
- PA-30 Acel-atop.doc
- (38.5 KiB) Downloaded 143 times
-
- PA-39 Acel-atop.doc
- (43.5 KiB) Downloaded 144 times
"Keep it above 5 feet and don't do nuthin dumb!"