Sounds simple - Yeah, trust me it's not - see the pic below
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This is our 6 cyl 3.3l aero engine in the plane I own a share of, it's a Jabiru, if that means anything to any of you.
You are looking at the engine from underneath, cyl's 1,3,5 are on the RHS as pictured, 2,4 & 6 on the left; fuel is supplied by a single Bing
carburettor fitted where the towel is currently blocking the entry - that plenum has a vertical "strut" on the entry designed to split
airflow equally left & right & has various vanes/fins within designed to get airflow to each cyl (yes, I know it''s a crap
design!)
We, along with other Jabiru owners have always had difficulty in getting consistent cooling equally to each side, the LHS (2,4,6) always tends to run
warmer than the RHS (by as much as 40 degrees). The engine does have an oil cooler, but that only really controls oil temp, has very little to do with
cyl head temps which are what we have to monitor The engine has air ducts/cowls which fit around the top of the heads & direct air around the
cooling fins - these have to be a little different side to side, because as you can see the cyl's are staggered
Reading the Jabiru forums everyone agrees that the engine is not just air cooled it is air/fuel cooled & having experimented with mixture, we
would certainly agree that running richer lowers both EGT's & CHT's (Exhaust gas temps & Cylinder head temps)
Now; we've done manometer checks within the cooling ducts at entry & exit & pressures are as near the same as we can tell with the
limited resources available, so there would not appear to be any significant difference in the airflow
Even with all the ducts & cowls removed if the engine is run up on the ground the LHS always warms up significantly faster than the RHS -
EGT's are very close to equal, cyl head temps miles different & airflow around all cyl's with the ducts is fairly random, just from the
propwash
There are suggestions on the Jabiru forums that one side runs richer than the other, our plug colours would deny this as would our EGT's so why
should one side run hotter than the other, I also fail to see how with only one atomiser putting vapourised fuel into ALL air drawn thro' the
carb how more fuel could end up consistently one side or t'other???
Is it feasible that as cyl's 2,4 6 are "fed" first from the single carb that they are actually getting MORE of the same mixture, a bit
like having twin carbs, but with one carb bigger than the other, but delivering equal air/fuel mix. This would probably keep EGT's very similar,
but would presumably give those 3 cyl's more power & more power = more heat, or is that idea just plain daft
We can overcome the basic high cyl head temps issue by running a richer mixture at WOT when the demands on engine & cooling are greatest, but that
still leaves us with a significant imbalance between the 2 sides, which means it's impossible to run both sides at the ideal running temps
Any ideas or input welcome it's got me tearing my (already grey!) hair out
I'm not really into air cooled engines but IIRC they do need good oil flow as part of the cooling so could it be that the oil is not getting to/from the hot bank as fast as it should?
Is it not possible to fit afr/ lambar sensors to the left and right side exhaust so you could check fuelling on the 2 banks. You would then have a better idea if its cooling or management of fuel
assuming all the parts are the same and just the location changes, how about the exhaust, a restriction there will cause it to run hot, have you been onto the engine manafacturers ?
Remembering that the prop wash is in a spiral one intake will have the cooling air entering the intake from the top and the other from the bottom,
although the flow may seem to be equal in pressure the flow direction sure isn't so poor ducting could be causing issues there or the assumption
that both sides should have identical ducting. Tufts of wool attached to the visible internal cowling should help identify turbulent air flow or
stagnant pockets. Even a spot infrared temperature gun should help identify overheating sections.
Also having an over-size intake can actually cause overheating if the exit is undersized. I was always told the exit should be about 3 times larger
than the intake to accommodate the expansion of the hot air. You don't show the engine baffle arraignment, I'm assuming its leak tight and
close fitting passing from the top to the bottom. The rear cylinders are always going to have a hard time unless fed by their own dedicated baffle. I
can't see in between the barrels but VW / Porsche fitted plates between the barrels to force air sideways rather than directly through the fins
to cool the underside. Not that that always worked as there was one cylinder that cooked and use to drop valves.
Nice engine but the fins look a bit chunky on the heads, would have liked them to be tapered thinner.
I did an exhaust for an H/O 8 cylinder version than was installed in a Spitfire lookalike, hence the 6 outlets per side at the top.
This engine is now running water cooled cylinder heads.
Paul G
Description
in answer to the first 3 Q's, there is nothing in the top end of the engine to allow any significant oil cooling, it's a pushrod engine
& only fairly limited flow to the rocker covers, no one has ever mentioned anything connected with oil cooling the engine other than airflow
thro' the oil cooler affecting the overall flow over the engine as a whole.
Fitting lambda sensors or anything to properly monitor air/fuel on each bank would be ideal, but unfortunately would require a "Mod" with
LAA engineering, we can only do stuff which would be regarded as temporary & test on the ground, anything fitted more permanently or to be used in
actual flight needs a Mod applied for & is a proper PITA!
We've had the exhaust to bits in the past, no restrictions other than the crap (typical aeronautical - think pre '50's - design!) - the
manufacturer are no help, they take the attitude that every plane is different & will be assembled differently & it's an Australian
manufacturer - which makes it all the more strange that they didn't design it with decent cooling in the first place - these are the 2nd
generation barrels & heads, the early ones had b*gger all fins on worth talking about - strangely they suffered with overheating problems
...............
quote:
Originally posted by Mr Whippy
Remembering that the prop wash is in a spiral one intake will have the cooling air entering the intake from the top and the other from the bottom, although the flow may seem to be equal in pressure the flow direction sure isn't so poor ducting could be causing issues there or the assumption that both sides should have identical ducting. Tufts of wool attached to the visible internal cowling should help identify turbulent air flow or stagnant pockets. Even a spot infrared temperature gun should help identify overheating sections.
Also having an over-size intake can actually cause overheating if the exit is undersized. I was always told the exit should be about 3 times larger than the intake to accommodate the expansion of the hot air. You don't show the engine baffle arraignment, I'm assuming its leak tight and close fitting passing from the top to the bottom. The rear cylinders are always going to have a hard time unless fed by their own dedicated baffle. I can't see in between the barrels but VW / Porsche fitted plates between the barrels to force air sideways rather than directly through the fins to cool the underside. Not that that always worked as there was one cylinder that cooked and use to drop valves.
Nice engine but the fins look a bit chunky on the heads, would have liked them to be tapered thinner.
quote:
Originally posted by 907
I did an exhaust for an H/O 8 cylinder version than was installed in a Spitfire lookalike, hence the 6 outlets per side at the top.
This engine is now running water cooled cylinder heads.
Paul G
Description
Iirc (and this has nowt to do with aircooled but may help in a roundabout way), Suzuki found that the inner cylinders on the Hayabusa ran hotter than the outer so run the inner cylinders slightly richer. No idea how true but may be a way to control temps (if you can do that sort of thing with your engine)
Hi Russbost,
Some questions...
Are the differences in temperature the same (or similar) at all power settings or airspeeds?
Have you changed CHT probe cables from side to side? To see if temperatures switch sides?
Is baffling tight to the cowling on both sides?
From some pics on the internet I see that the oil filter is on the left side of the engine, but I donīt think that will produce 40 deg difference.
Do you have pics of your engine bay?
Re: Suzuki found that the inner cylinders on the Hayabusa ran hotter than the outer so run the inner cylinders slightly richer.
There are plenty of 3 cylinders Triumph motorcycle, 3 row injection throttle bodies available on ebay, or the like of ebay. If you placed one per bank
you would get individual cylinder mixture control. You can fit different sized injectors. Alternatively, fit an oil cooler per bank of cylinders, or
one that is much larger. Can you fit them to be sited remotely? VW air cooled flat 4, or Porsche flat 6 engine parts may be adaptable.
How about swapping it with a Porsche flat 6 engine? Get the simpler normally aspirated engine with the distributor etc.
I hope that this is of help.
quote:
Originally posted by Pigsy
Re: Suzuki found that the inner cylinders on the Hayabusa ran hotter than the outer so run the inner cylinders slightly richer.
There are plenty of 3 cylinders Triumph motorcycle, 3 row injection throttle bodies available on ebay, or the like of ebay. If you placed one per bank you would get individual cylinder mixture control. You can fit different sized injectors. Alternatively, fit an oil cooler per bank of cylinders, or one that is much larger. Can you fit them to be sited remotely? VW air cooled flat 4, or Porsche flat 6 engine parts may be adaptable.
How about swapping it with a Porsche flat 6 engine? Get the simpler normally aspirated engine with the distributor etc.
I hope that this is of help.
IF the engine rotation is clockwise from above, could it be poor splash lubrication from the crankshaft, or poor drainage down the RHS banks from the push rod tubes.??? JMTP'sW.
Mind too that the oil does have a large part to play in the cooling of the engine, though it doesn't explain the imbalance... I'm assuming you have tried swapping round the temp sensors and wiring to check it's a reliable reading? that they are mounted to identical area's on the engine? If you have access to the heads when running I would have taken average readings again with a infrared thermometer. Maybe borrowing a IR camera could highlight problem areas on the engine??
My guess is that it is the air flow from the prop. I assume you run the engine with prop fitted, can you ru. Without it?
If not, make a cylindrical cowl around the engine to control air flow. Will this be symmetrical around d the prop, then where do the cylinder heads
lie in the space, is one side going ebe better cooled.
Depending on which direction the prooeis spinning, can hot air from one bank be directed to the other so it has hotter air flow g onto it?
quote:
Originally posted by Simon
Iirc (and this has nowt to do with aircooled but may help in a roundabout way), Suzuki found that the inner cylinders on the Hayabusa ran hotter than the outer so run the inner cylinders slightly richer. No idea how true but may be a way to control temps (if you can do that sort of thing with your engine)
quote:
Originally posted by Angel Acevedo
Hi Russbost,
Some questions...
Are the differences in temperature the same (or similar) at all power settings or airspeeds?
Have you changed CHT probe cables from side to side? To see if temperatures switch sides?
Is baffling tight to the cowling on both sides?
From some pics on the internet I see that the oil filter is on the left side of the engine, but I donīt think that will produce 40 deg difference.
Do you have pics of your engine bay?
quote:
Originally posted by jollygreengiant
IF the engine rotation is clockwise from above, could it be poor splash lubrication from the crankshaft, or poor drainage down the RHS banks from the push rod tubes.??? JMTP'sW.
I think I've answered Mr Whippy's Q's with the info above, & one bit at the end of this one
02GF74 unfortunately can't run without the prop, but I think what we did by taping over the ducts is similar as it removes prop air almost
entirely from the equation
Re can hot air be transferred from one side to the other, not to any significant degree due to the plenums/ducting, & given the prop rotation, you
are getting air travelling in an upward spiral on the LH bank (the hot side) & a downward spiral on the cooler bank, it would seem logical that
having the air forced directly down onto the heads rather than up into the cowl & along (that's what the temporary baffle at the front of the
LH bank is for, with no baffle there no. 2 runs much hotter & no. 6 much cooler)
You're coming up with some interesting & sensible stuff guys, but, unfortunately we've already tried most of it, I was just hoping
someone might spot something obvious we'd missed - air cooled engines are not a strongpoint for me
Possibly Mr Whippy's idea with bits of wool to detect laminar flow & an infra red camera (does anyone have one they' like to lend me???
) might just throw up something useful, but, problem is, if we have good laminar flow on the cool side & disruptive flow on the hot side, what
the hell do we do to straighten out that disrupted flow?
I think I may have the answer...
The soft baffling looks a tad too soft...
Inflight it may be collapsing back, therefore not enough cooling air being directed over the cylinders.
HTH and Solves your problem.
Angel Acevedo
Re: Donīt think he can do that, itīs a plane, not a car...
I appreciate fully that this is an aeroplane and not a car. Are you not aware of how many light aircraft use VW beetle flat four, air cooled engines
(from their car range) where you can fit extra large oil coolers. By enrichening the fuel passing into the bores, if you keep the same engine, you
will reduce the running temperatures. It is perhaps too simple for some. Using two sets of Triumph fuel injection throttle bodies from their
Motorcycles, you will find that they will fit straight on to the induction pipes of your flat six air cooled engine. You will not need the Bing
carburettor at all. A small aftermarket fuel injection with its own ecu is available. You need to look for it. With this you will have a far greater
control over your fuel mixture.
The Porsche engine has been used many times, but then, hey, what do I know.
quote:
Originally posted by Pigsy
Re: Donīt think he can do that, itīs a plane, not a car...
I appreciate fully that this is an aeroplane and not a car. Are you not aware of how many light aircraft use VW beetle flat four, air cooled engines (from their car range) where you can fit extra large oil coolers. By enrichening the fuel passing into the bores, if you keep the same engine, you will reduce the running temperatures. It is perhaps too simple for some. Using two sets of Triumph fuel injection throttle bodies from their Motorcycles, you will find that they will fit straight on to the induction pipes of your flat six air cooled engine. You will not need the Bing carburettor at all. A small aftermarket fuel injection with its own ecu is available. You need to look for it. With this you will have a far greater control over your fuel mixture.
The Porsche engine has been used many times, but then, hey, what do I know.
Pigsy, I'd not replied as felt Angel's answer covered it. But, yes, a different engine could be fitted, but with aero stuff this just opens
up a whole new bunch of nightmares. Firstly there is the weight & balance & CoG which it will certainly screw up - these things rarely seem to
accidentally work out better. Then there's the matter of mounting it, suitable exhaust etc & then you have a fuel injection system designed
to work typically between 0 & 3 or 4,000 feet on Mogas rather than at up to 10,000ft on avgas. If I was going for an engine swap then I think a
ZZR1400 would be choice, I think it might need a reduction box tho'!!!
As said we could chuck Ģ4 or Ģ5k at it with the later heads, plenums, cowls & exhaust & given that there's 5 of us sharing that's
not even that much money, certainly not in aviation terms, it just seems like using a sledge hammer to crack a relatively small nut ..........
Angel, a nice thought re the soft baffling, which allows the plenums to mate with the top cowl ducts, but we've had several different versions in
the past, none have made any difference, also, that wouldn't explain the issues on the ground with little or no airflow & still a huge
difference side to side, added to which when the cooling is at it's best, ie straight level cruise, is surely when the soft rubber would be most
likely to be disturbed, at around 125mph rather than ground speeds
I'll keep looking/trying stuff .............
Russ,
What is baffling me, is which bank is at fault, is it the hot one is too hot, and shouldn't be, or the cool one is to cold, and should be hotter?
Does the engine have separate EGT gauges, as in one for each bank, and if it does, are you able to verify that both are reading the same temps ?can
they be swapped with wiring to the opposite sides, to allow a comparison ?
Is carb heat fitted? and if so is it working off one bank or both,
Are the cold air feed ducts the same size, and placed equally behind the propeller,
Hot air needs to exit the cowling equally from both sides, does the hot side have any obstructions in its air exit, like startermotor
battery, or any large obstruction, that would impede its exit
steve
I was suggesting running engine up to temp without the prop I. E. No cooling to see if uneven temperature is due to the air cooling.
Also what is the mac running temperature?
Is the temperature difference causing any problems, if not, then maybe you are worrying over nothing.
Pikes peak is at 14114.17 feet. Injection beats carburetion there hands down.
When was the engine last rebuilt? Are the oil-ways clear on the hot bank? If you are running the standard air cooling shrouds then surely it will be
down to the forced air passing through them, not around them to do the cooling, especially if completely encased. I now rest my laurels. Please do not
reply to me now.
stupid question... but have you spoken to Jabiru? compared to some manufacturers I've seen they seem very helpful, the also have some very good
docs online on cowling which are some of the best I've seen yet (I'm quite into planes...) -
linky 1
linky 2
I like their flow visualisation, quite funny and probably very true
I notice that your cowl does not match their pics inside, they are showing air dams which seems to be totally missing on yours. As you say the later
head is so much better fin wise, can the heads be swapped?
I'd have a chat first with them and they have a forum...
Welcome to the fun and rather costly world of private planes....
[Edited on 21/7/18 by Mr Whippy]
quote:
Originally posted by steve m
Russ,
What is baffling me, is which bank is at fault, is it the hot one is too hot, and shouldn't be, or the cool one is to cold, and should be hotter?
Does the engine have separate EGT gauges, as in one for each bank, and if it does, are you able to verify that both are reading the same temps ?can they be swapped with wiring to the opposite sides, to allow a comparison ?
Is carb heat fitted? and if so is it working off one bank or both,
Are the cold air feed ducts the same size, and placed equally behind the propeller,
Hot air needs to exit the cowling equally from both sides, does the hot side have any obstructions in its air exit, like startermotor
battery, or any large obstruction, that would impede its exit
steve
quote:
Originally posted by 02GF74
I was suggesting running engine up to temp without the prop I. E. No cooling to see if uneven temperature is due to the air cooling.
Also what is the mac running temperature?
Is the temperature difference causing any problems, if not, then maybe you are worrying over nothing.
quote:
Originally posted by Mr Whippy
stupid question... but have you spoken to Jabiru? compared to some manufacturers I've seen they seem very helpful, the also have some very good docs online on cowling which are some of the best I've seen yet (I'm quite into planes...) -
linky 1
linky 2
I like their flow visualisation, quite funny and probably very true
I notice that your cowl does not match their pics inside, they are showing air dams which seems to be totally missing on yours. As you say the later head is so much better fin wise, can the heads be swapped?
I'd have a chat first with them and they have a forum...
Welcome to the fun and rather costly world of private planes....
[Edited on 21/7/18 by Mr Whippy]
they do seems to have reliability issues with their engines just now and serious restrictions soon to be in place because of this. I was into light planes about 15 years ago with Cessna's, sailplanes, then 3 axis microlights then flex wings but the hanger costs got too much (was only me as the owner) and the useless weather here and even more useless forecasts ended up just making it frustrating and I had a few scares (even one forced landing in a field...) so decided to call it quits while I was still alive and sold up and got into kit cars. Now my flying is all rc planes & heli's but still love planes
could it be exhaust design causing the temperature imbalance?
First thought was prop wash spiral input to the cooling ducts, or similar different airflow over the exit hole causing different cooling air
extraction, but might it be that one side of exhaust is more restrictive?
quote:
Originally posted by Mr Whippy
they do seems to have reliability issues with their engines just now and serious restrictions soon to be in place because of this. I was into light planes about 15 years ago with Cessna's, sailplanes, then 3 axis microlights then flex wings but the hanger costs got too much (was only me as the owner) and the useless weather here and even more useless forecasts ended up just making it frustrating and I had a few scares (even one forced landing in a field...) so decided to call it quits while I was still alive and sold up and got into kit cars. Now my flying is all rc planes & heli's but still love planes
quote:
Originally posted by Beardy
could it be exhaust design causing the temperature imbalance?
First thought was prop wash spiral input to the cooling ducts, or similar different airflow over the exit hole causing different cooling air extraction, but might it be that one side of exhaust is more restrictive?