Vulture sure sank deeply out of contention W, just as every X-type R-R mill did..
& regardless of the correct dimensional parameter particulars, it effectively orphaned the Tornado airframe..
manolis wrote:Hello J.A.W.
For some reason your posts are published with one or two days delay.
You write:
“. . . repeating the claim of lower S-V oil consumption”
The specific lube consumption of the Sleeve valve airplane engines was about half than that of the poppet valve airplane engines of that era.
But we talk for extreme specific lube consumptions: about 5gr/kWh for the sleeves (0.008lb/HP/Hour), and 9gr/kWh (0.0015lb/HP/Hour) for the poppet valve engines.
Supposing a specific fuel consumption of 250gr/kWh (32% BTE), the oil-fuel ratio is 1:50 in the sleeve valve aero engines and 1:28 in the poppet valve aero engines.
Such a specific lube consumption fits with 2-stoke engines (the modern giant 2-stroke marine engines run on specific lube consumption of 0.7gr/kWh, i.e. seven times lower than in the old sleeve valve 4-stroke aero engines.
In order sleeve valves to be used in a modern car / motorcycle engine, it is required a control mechanism to keep the oil from escaping to the exhaust and from getting into the combustion chamber degrading the combustion and increasing the emissions (MIT, http://www.pattakon.com/tempman/Lubrica ... Diesel.pdf )...
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos
Only the Vulture was seriously considered for production.J.A.W. wrote:Vulture sure sank deeply out of contention W, just as every X-type R-R mill did..
& regardless of the correct dimensional parameter particulars, it effectively orphaned the Tornado airframe..
manolis wrote:
By the way, a free breathing 4-stroke capable to operate at really high revs can make a lot of power; more than a conventional 2-stroke of similar design / capacity, without the "issues" of the conventional 2-strokes.
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos
Hives?J.A.W. wrote:
Pragmatist boss of R-R, Hines, to his credit, saw this & wisely concentrated on the development of their basically effective, if old-fashioned V12 units.
Brian Coat wrote:Hives?J.A.W. wrote:
Pragmatist boss of R-R, Hines, to his credit, saw this & wisely concentrated on the development of their basically effective, if old-fashioned V12 units.
He must have been a very special type of tactician who was able to stick with and develop the "tried and tested" then soon after ... switch everything to a *brand new* technology.
Tommy Cookers wrote:we now know that the NR500 suffered far more than eg a reed-valve or disc-valve 2 stroke from .......
lack of the modern fast-burning type fuel and suitable fuel injection
lack of the modern fly-by-wire type relationship between twistgrip and throttle plate for shaping response
and from noise limits .....
affecting a 4 stroke (multi-camshaft and megaphone) far more than the 2 stroke (whose expansion chambers want tailpipe restriction anyway)
but which Honda engine designer would have had the guts to forecast this outcome to the policy-makers ?
Honda were then in a displacement-efficiency competition
but 2 stroke fans should consider that now Moto GP rewards fuel-efficiency, not displacement-efficiency
btw despite unequal piston motion the Vulture and Exe had no crankshaft-torsion problem (the only Exe engine flew hundreds of hours)
similarly so the Lion/Sea Lion, the Lorraine-Dietrich/Isotta-Fraschini W18s (incl. marine versions), also Farman and Hispano W12s ?
and Rocchi's Life F35 W12 F1 engine of 1990 had master/slave rods
as does apparently a development of the Isotta-Fraschini in production by CRM Motori Marini, a W18 54 litre turbocharged diesel
and engines with equal motion had such problems eg the original Liberty, and the DH Gipsy 6s (weird firing order, and six 3rd order dampers)
current Continental flat 6s have 6th order dampers and some also 4.5th order - presumably Lycomings are the similarly equipped
but there will anyway be torsional etc vibration design issues from driving the aircraft load system ie propellor or rotor
ok the X4 2 stroke might be no more difficult in this regard than eg the conventional 4 stroke flat 6 cylinder or radial 7 cylinder ?
Are you making things up again?J.A.W. wrote:The triple bank broad-arrow arrangement aero-mills such as the Napier Lion, did not suffer the 'herky-jerky' motion issues that bedeviled the X-types, due to the 'magic' of the prime 3 at work, mayhaps?
& did the R-R Exe pass a type-test, or was it a pampered experimental hack for its "hundreds of hours" of flight?
What exactly were these "dirty tricks".J.A.W. wrote: Hives.. yes ta Brian, that typo had me scratching..
& if by 'tactician' - you mean 'ruthless business tycoon' - then yes, Hives snaffled up Whittle's gas-turbine quick-smart..
..after he'd done every industrial/commercial 'dirty trick' in the book, to dominate the piston engine scene, even in wartime..