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Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

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  • #31
    Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

    Originally posted by 440_Magnum
    It had two separate crakshafts geared together at the center of the block. The output shaft ran from the center of the engine, through the crankcase above the the front crankshaft to the propeller gearbox.
    Believe it or not, this was Chrysler's first "hemi"! An inverted V-16 with a continuous crank, cases, and heads. The center power tap allowed very short load paths for the crankshaft as well as a shorter gearbox to engine spacing since the quill shaft was parallel to the forward cylinders instead of in front of them.

    60 degree V12 and 90 degree V16 four-stroke engines have perfect balance. They are long, and good design is required to make them reliable. F1 has centered on V10s to reduce piston drag. Indy and Nascar use 6 and 8 cylinders due to rules restrictions, otherwise they would also go to 10 or more.

    To me, the diefication of these ancient powerplants is simply because ther has been no 1000+ HP piston aircraft engine development since 1950 to take their place. If there were a market, the application of modern materials, combustion technology, turbomachinery, manifolding, controls, coatings, thermodynamics, mechanical design, etc. would astonish people to the point that they would not believe it even after it won a race.

    There is hope. After a brief honeymoon, the general aviation industry is discovering that small turbines are neither cheap nor efficient. Efficiency requires stages and blades, blades cost money: efficient engines are expensive, cheap engines are inefficient.

    Finally there is enough money being put into the 500 to 1000 HP market that several organizations are researching efficient piston engines in this range. We readily accept Greenameyer's TSIO-550 putting out double its stock power rating for the length of a race week. To the doubtful posters here: what would you think of a production aircraft, certificated, 1000 HP piston engine putting out 2000 in race trim? 3000? The unlimiteds seem to run out of reliability somewhere in the 2 to 3X military-continuous-power range.
    Eric Ahlstrom

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    • #32
      Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

      Originally posted by Unregistered
      People,
      #1 The Rumanian clone manufacture of a RR V-12 is DOA
      #2 Reno 2005 is over
      #3 The AAFO dot com crash is over
      #4 Katrina is over

      What to do?
      Lets put our heads together for a serious attempt to brain storm a modern day V12 and see if we can come up with a fun design that will theoretically challenge the RR bench mark we all know and love today(aka: = 2 a basic clone MG-TF motor that has 12 cylinders and is 26.9 liters.)

      who knew? I got some ideas... lets do it? For fun?

      ZOOM
      How about digging out all the LATE model Allisons? They were built to be simpler which means less parts to break, and I've read that they are just as hot as the merlins.

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

        Hi !


        Me and Matt did some work on this in 2000-2002.

        Here is my " entry " !


        rgds,

        Juke
        Attached Files
        http://max3fan.blogspot.com/

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

          Originally posted by spacegrrrl
          Nascar runs flat out for hundreds of miles, Offshore racing boats run at full throttle for hours.
          Michele
          Disagree. They "breathe" the engines on every lap. Not true in air racing.
          _________
          -Matt
          Red Bull has no earthly idea what "air racing" is.

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          • #35
            Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

            Again, changes in power setting are the most stressful time for an engine and offshore race engines suffer much more abuse than an engine in a race plane.

            Michele

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            • #36
              Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

              Originally posted by spacegrrrl
              Again, changes in power setting are the most stressful time for an engine and offshore race engines suffer much more abuse than an engine in a race plane.

              Michele

              Agreed.

              However....the engines in an offshore boat are not being pushed to twice the design limit that current Unlimited powerplants are. They are being run 'as designed', within the red-line.

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                Originally posted by speeddemon
                Agreed.

                However....the engines in an offshore boat are not being pushed to twice the design limit that current Unlimited powerplants are. They are being run 'as designed', within the red-line.
                Right, and at that design limit the best of them make 1400HP. So the point being putting several of them together makes for a potential aircraft racing powerplant. You don't plan on running them past their design limit. Just right up to their limit.

                Michele

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                • #38
                  Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                  Michele,

                  Something like this perhaps ?
                  Attached Files
                  http://max3fan.blogspot.com/

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                    I'd say consider a push/pull configuration. Plan on a shaft drive for the pusher prop to keep it well behind the empenage and that should be optimal.

                    But yeah, definitely a slick idea.

                    Michele

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                      By the way, was the idea to maybe use an F-86, Lear or Sabre Liner wing?

                      Michele

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                        Originally posted by spacegrrrl
                        By the way, was the idea to maybe use an F-86, Lear or Sabre Liner wing?
                        If there's one thing we should take out of the last several years of looking at commercial aviation, Sport and F-1, it's that the aerodynamics have come much farther than the engines.

                        Forget those ridiculously outdated wings. Modern aerodynamic optimization is capable of double to triple the L/D of anything prior to 1985.
                        Eric Ahlstrom

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                          That does raise a very interesting point. Maybe a new "Tsunami" design that can win with the right aerodymanics. If you look at the change in HP it takes to go faster and then look at what a some drag reduction can do you see there is a lot more speed to be found in the in the airframe than the engine. The thing that is sad now is that the silly "John Parker" minimun weight rule forces you to build a bigger (or at least heavier) airplane than might be optimal.

                          Michele

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                            I was wondering what the advantages and dissadvantages of turbochargers vs. superchargers?
                            Thanks,
                            Jarrod

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                              It is nice to see that we are having a good technical discussion (drool) about some meaning full "brickwalls" that need to be addressed. There will bee a point

                              Llook at the U boats and the need to get back to the piston v12s instead of the not so unteresting kerosene blowers..... they really have a problem.....(the days of circus-circus piling up toasted allisons like chortd wood are over).

                              I know that the market for u boats and u airplanes are small, but if anybody is looking at trhe world of rapid protyping and a massive power of realtime (cheep) thermodynamics and dynamic stress software and BKM (best know methods) mfg. I have see far mor complex projects that are not that expensive to develop.

                              All of the postulates of : optimum piston surface area, piston speed and recip mass accleration and deaccl with rod length stuff and all that ball of wax is commonly understood.

                              The coordination of a dedicated aero design ( not like the "Thunder Power" example that eventually cost about the same as the gt it was to replace. And all the components ( auto / alloy rat can am motor clones) that had to be scrapped in favor of a one off fab of a auto/aero bastard that still had some major annoying attributes of its car motor couson is proof that alot of smart money couldnot do the trick.

                              My point in this thread is to get some meaning dialogue going, for the causual motor head but also contributors "in the know" of where all this RR clone business should be going.

                              Sheesh.... with all that "bucks" floating around and woodeees to push the limit!

                              Are we going to make a separate thread outta this Wayne? It is about time, i think

                              cool thread , ZOOM

                              PS / OOPS!!!!
                              The comment of the schneider cup racers was cool!

                              Does any one have any info on the 30s 0r 40s itialian design semi-submersible aero racer that use a boat prop at the rear and once the aircraft body got on the "step" on water the fromnt prop was "crash box" shifted to get airborne???? i saw a pix in a book years ago..... she was floating, 70% in the water and the color was red. Anybody have any input?

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Cook book recipe for a modern day V12 ! !

                                I believe a supercharger can provide a higher pressure, but robs crankshaft power to do so. Turbos are basically free extra horsepower as they recover energy lost out of the tailpipe.

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