Spin Posted July 6, 2011 Posted July 6, 2011 Ok further to the above, I see things got a little heated - as they tend to when alternate engines are being discussed and mods have pulled the pin on it. The earlier text is there to read though.
Sloper Posted July 7, 2011 Author Posted July 7, 2011 Goodaye all l got a copy of the email the people in the US had, basicly the paper trail for that container was forgotton, so the container sat. Will know be leaving the 10th Its one of the first here. regards Bruce
Kyle Communications Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 Hi Bruce There are a lot of people waiting to see how yours performs...hurry up and get that cougar ready to fly . Have you seen any other videos other than the ones produced by Viking on the net?..also maybe others who actually have them flying as well. That forum discussion was interesting to read especially that the engines are from low mileage wrecked vehicles Mark
fly_tornado Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 I priced a honda jazz engine from a gold coast wrecker, they wanted $1500 + delivery. from a car with less than 10K
Sloper Posted July 7, 2011 Author Posted July 7, 2011 Goodaye all Thought l might give you my thoughts on why l choose a Viking. l do have a bit of engineering background. First cost. Big savings on the initial purchase. Uses premium unleaded. Service costs, l doubt l will need to do anything to the heads in the first 500 hrs like a certain well known engine. l can get engine parts from my nearest Honda dealer. l expect my hourly flying cost to be pretty low. Reliabilty Its a Honda and there millions of the things, l checked out the particuler engine with a dealer and they have no issues at all (but that is in a car) Twin ICU's Fuel injected, no carby icing. Gear PSU Tempature monitoring of PSU Water cooled. Now l cant see it being any less reliable than current aircraft engines, a through inspection before flight, maintenence should pick up any majour issues. As far as maintence is concerned l will get my ticket for it and know that it is right, my motto is if in doubt throw it out. So out of l expect to have a safe engine that would be just as reliable as some of other offerings and know l can acturly afford to fly. As for them being out of low milage wrecks, l am not overly worried. Just remember l am registering it as a experimental and l am experimenting. regards Bruce 1
eightyknots Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 Using a great Aluminium deoxidiser that was recomended to me by truck body builder. (inexpensive safe and goes far) Sloper: How does this work and what are the benefits of the aluminium deoxidiser??
Sloper Posted July 7, 2011 Author Posted July 7, 2011 Yes l have tried it, leaves a dull surface that can be polished up. l will have to grabk the bottle but from memory its a phosphoric acid based one. Gets very diluted. regards Bruce
fly_tornado Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 the biggest saving with an auto conversion is it will be cheaper to buy another low mileage engine than the cost of the rebuild. even if you get only get 1000 hours out of each engine.
pdriussi Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 I agree with the auto conversions, when you look at other people who are using VW and subaru etc, they are getting as much time out of their engines as the jab/rotax options for 1/3 the initial purchase price. I have owned subaru before in a car and I can tell you those engines do handle a solid flogging! And there seems to be a lot of research going into these newer conversion engines, just the manufacturers dont do the required certification process perhaps due to cost etc. With the added benifit of simple/cheap repairs, electronic ignition, fuel injection and a computer you can grab out of a wrecked car if things go bung. I for one would be very interested on the outcome of this engine type.
fly_tornado Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 water cooling makes a lot more sense to a high load application like flying. its heat that wears an engine out.
eightyknots Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 Are the Viking auto conversion engines much heavier than the J@b!ru or R*t@x engines?
Sloper Posted July 7, 2011 Author Posted July 7, 2011 Same as a 6cyl Jab and the same mount postion, make you tkink what market Viking are targeting. :big_grin: By the time l get 1000 hrs up l could start looking for new crate engine at a reasonable price. regards Bruce
eightyknots Posted July 7, 2011 Posted July 7, 2011 I had a look at their website and they have quite a list of customers to whom they have shipped Viking engines (you're included!). There are lots of Zenith owners and there is even one Savannah owner in among the buyers. They seem so much cheaper than the Austrian/Australian engines.
fly_tornado Posted July 8, 2011 Posted July 8, 2011 I don't think you will get an auto conversion to weigh as much as a 912, but you can get close to a 914. The honda L15 engine is cool in that it has a central camshaft instead of a twin cam arrangement which makes it very compact. and the built in exhaust manifold.
Sloper Posted July 11, 2011 Author Posted July 11, 2011 Goodaye all Been busy on the weekend. Made a couple of small changes, mainly due to my engineering thinking of failure modes (what if's) First off l have fitted the top hinge bracket on the inside, takes the loading off the rivets. Means if the rivets were to fail the bracket is still captured with in the skin. (the rudder might stay on) Also l have extended the rudder pins, so if the bushing fails or the fuslauge moves alot the rudder once again should stay on. Have also organised a towing/tiedown point, will post pics when finished. Painted the rudder internaly and will close that up tomorrow, maybe. The Ship with my motor has left Los Angeles. http://aprs.fi/?call=i%2F538002881 regards Bruce
Kyle Communications Posted July 11, 2011 Posted July 11, 2011 Bruce Have you had any contact with anyone who is actually using theViking engines yet Mark
Sloper Posted July 11, 2011 Author Posted July 11, 2011 No, there's only the stuff Jan has put out. There's some disscussion here. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Vikingaircraftengines/ regards Bruce
eightyknots Posted July 11, 2011 Posted July 11, 2011 Goodaye allBeen busy on the weekend. Made a couple of small changes, mainly due to my engineering thinking of failure modes (what if's) First off l have fitted the top hinge bracket on the inside, takes the loading off the rivets. Means if the rivets were to fail the bracket is still captured with in the skin. (the rudder might stay on) Also l have extended the rudder pins, so if the bushing fails or the fuslauge moves alot the rudder once again should stay on. Have also organised a towing/tiedown point, will post pics when finished. Painted the rudder internaly and will close that up tomorrow, maybe. The Ship with my motor has left Los Angeles. http://aprs.fi/?call=i/538002881 regards Bruce Sloper, I followed your tracked engine. I hate to disappoint you but the ETA in Melbourne is given as midnight 11th June. Your Viking motor departed on the 11th July. That will take 335 days to get to OZ! Are they using a rowboat?
Sloper Posted July 11, 2011 Author Posted July 11, 2011 Bugger , its ment to get here the 30tyh July . l wondered how many people would notice. regards Bruce
fly_tornado Posted July 11, 2011 Posted July 11, 2011 my container went from the east coast of the US via Spain, Italy, change of ships, Madagascar, Perth, Melbourne, Sydney, change of ships, Brisbane
Guernsey Posted July 12, 2011 Posted July 12, 2011 my container went from the east coast of the US via Spain, Italy, change of ships, Madagascar, Perth, Melbourne, Sydney, change of ships, Brisbane Must have arrived with an International Cross Country Endorsement. Alan. 2
Sloper Posted August 2, 2011 Author Posted August 2, 2011 Goodaye all Been working on the elevator, l hate fibre glassing. proberly start skinning them over the weekend. Did l mention l hate fibre glassing. Did l mention l hate fibre glassing. l intend to put a couple of inspection covers in the elevator so that l can easily remove them. My engine is being unloaded and l am waiting for the call to go and pick it up. Made a couple of changes to the garage as well. Put a big stereo in and hooked it up to the computer, l can finaly play my music LOUD. Also l had to replaced the fibre glass sheets in the roof, what l did is put a batten on top and put two new sheets of poly carbonate on to replace one fibre glass. This left a 1 inch gap the whole length of the garage and improved venterlation. Did l mention l hate fibre glassing, glad l have a metal aircraft. regards Bruce
Sloper Posted August 4, 2011 Author Posted August 4, 2011 Did l mention l hate fibre glassing. At least the garage doesnt reek of fumes when l open the door now. regards Bruce
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now