banner
banner

17 Dec 2025, 06:01 [ UTC - 5; DST ]


Stevens Aerospace (Banner)



Reply to topic  [ 4166 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179 ... 278  Next
Username Protected Message
 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 19:49 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 01/04/17
Posts: 114
Post Likes: +35
Thanks for the update. I thought he was busy expanding the envelope and too busy to post new videos.

Just thought it was the flight envelope being expanded not the cooling envelope. :)


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 19:52 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 08/26/15
Posts: 10052
Post Likes: +10074
Company: airlines (*CRJ,A320)
Location: Florida panhandle
Aircraft: Travel Air,T-6B,etc*
Interesting trade-off... forty pounds of water (plus plumbing). I wonder if the weight budget and space could have been better invested in an auxiliary heat exchanger.

Just thinking out loud.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 19:55 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 11/22/12
Posts: 2937
Post Likes: +2910
Company: Retired
Location: Lynnwood, WA (KPAE)
Aircraft: Lancair Evolution
Username Protected wrote:
Peter put up a new video.... Wants to try some angle brackets ahead of the gear cavity.
Again with the angle brackets!! SMH


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 20:05 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 07/06/14
Posts: 4141
Post Likes: +2857
Location: MA
Aircraft: C340A; TBM850
Username Protected wrote:
Interesting trade-off... forty pounds of water (plus plumbing). I wonder if the weight budget and space could have been better invested in an auxiliary heat exchanger.

Just thinking out loud.


He's going to trade the 50 lbs added for the lead weights he's carrying in the left seat.

I don't follow what exactly the cooling system is. Does he have a radiator and an oil cooler and a loop for a heater and an intercooler? It seemed like what he was messing with at the scoop was the intercooler, but there had to be a radiator there too, right?


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 20:10 
Offline



 Profile




Joined: 03/05/14
Posts: 2986
Post Likes: +3170
Company: WA Aircraft
Location: Fort Worth, TX (T67)
Aircraft: 1969 Bonanza E33C
I’m blown away all the air wasn’t sent to the radiator from the beginning.

And how about that Home Depot baffle and dryer vent intake hose! :coffee: :lol:

Really though, every bit of air should go through that radiator. I bet that really helps the cooling problem.

And increasing the coolant quantity and using it for favorable CG is a good idea too.

Ramps for the gear wells is silly.

I think the instability came from aft CG. Aft CG and canards don’t mix.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 20:13 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 12/28/17
Posts: 804
Post Likes: +385
Company: Bellanca Aircraft
Location: Washington, OK
Aircraft: 17-30A
Username Protected wrote:
Interesting trade-off... forty pounds of water (plus plumbing). I wonder if the weight budget and space could have been better invested in an auxiliary heat exchanger.

Just thinking out loud.


He's going to trade the 50 lbs added for the lead weights he's carrying in the left seat.

I don't follow what exactly the cooling system is. Does he have a radiator and an oil cooler and a loop for a heater and an intercooler? It seemed like what he was messing with at the scoop was the intercooler, but there had to be a radiator there too, right?

Where he screwed up is compound turbo'ing with same size turbos. It doesn't work like that and just creates heat and complexity. If you go back to his older videos where you can see the radiator placement, it will never cool no matter how many fans he puts on it.

Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 20:48 
Offline


User avatar
 WWW  Profile




Joined: 01/23/13
Posts: 9471
Post Likes: +7137
Company: Kokotele Guitar Works
Location: Albany, NY
Aircraft: C-182RG, C-172, PA28
Username Protected wrote:
And how about that Home Depot baffle and dryer vent intake hose!


Max, I had the same thought! That's about the chintsiest looking solution I could imagine. Glad to see he really took his time with that...


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 20:52 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 03/22/18
Posts: 3724
Post Likes: +2104
Location: Nashville, TN
Aircraft: Lazarus - a B60 Duke
Username Protected wrote:
Where he screwed up is compound turbo'ing with same size turbos. It doesn't work like that and just creates heat and complexity. If you go back to his older videos where you can see the radiator placement, it will never cool no matter how many fans he puts on it.

^^^ This.

You can run twin turbos side by side but we see HUGE increases in efficiency on this engine running a slightly larger turbo in the better-cooled area. It really depends on how you're routing the air, how much intercooling the air charge gets, and engine heat dissipation.

It all works in conjunction with each other and if you tweak one thing, you have to compensate for it. I would suspect that if he could get the IAS up a bit towards 120-140, you'd get better cooling, but that also assumes he doesn't have a back-pressure problem that isn't allowing adequate air flow over the intercoolers/radiators. I'm not convinced that's not a problem.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 23:43 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 10/24/17
Posts: 334
Post Likes: +146
Location: Genoa IL
Aircraft: H35
I don’t know why I continue to watch these videos? I’m amazed PM thought that any cooling air was even going to make it through the coolers without a “back wall” to force air where it is needed. After seeing the solution, it’s clear this guy has given up inside. Zero pride of craftsmanship. I commend his attempt and wish him well, but this nonsense needs to be put to bed.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 13 Oct 2020, 23:52 
Offline



 Profile




Joined: 03/05/14
Posts: 2986
Post Likes: +3170
Company: WA Aircraft
Location: Fort Worth, TX (T67)
Aircraft: 1969 Bonanza E33C
For those who don’t watch.

This is the new baffle to direct air from the scoop to the radiators. Before all the air just went over the radiator and out the back.

Check out that top of the line material selection.


Please login or Register for a free account via the link in the red bar above to download files.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 14 Oct 2020, 02:18 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 11/03/08
Posts: 16963
Post Likes: +28847
Location: Peachtree City GA / Stoke-On-Trent UK
Aircraft: A33
ok that's maybe enough air for the oil cooler. Now it's time to start on a way to get air for the coolant.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 14 Oct 2020, 02:56 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 03/15/16
Posts: 441
Post Likes: +349
Location: NC
Aircraft: Looking for one
Let’s add 5 gallons of coolant and gain 60 more seconds......


Please login or Register for a free account via the link in the red bar above to download files.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 14 Oct 2020, 06:52 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 11/15/09
Posts: 36
Post Likes: +5
Aircraft: M20K
“ Check out that top of the line material selection.”

Not too bad. I thought he’d stick to the cardboard version.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 14 Oct 2020, 07:02 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 01/30/09
Posts: 6025
Post Likes: +3389
Location: Oklahoma City, OK (KPWA)
Aircraft: planeless
Username Protected wrote:
Where he screwed up is compound turbo'ing with same size turbos. It doesn't work like that and just creates heat and complexity. If you go back to his older videos where you can see the radiator placement, it will never cool no matter how many fans he puts on it.


I don't understand why you would want compound turbos at all in an airplane application? I'd want one turbo sized for peak efficiency. I'd settle for parallel twins only if the packaging benefits were very compelling.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Raptor Aircraft 5 Seat Pressurized 3,600 NM Range Die
PostPosted: 14 Oct 2020, 07:31 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 07/06/14
Posts: 4141
Post Likes: +2857
Location: MA
Aircraft: C340A; TBM850
Username Protected wrote:
ok that's maybe enough air for the oil cooler. Now it's time to start on a way to get air for the coolant.

The ducting is the intake air. There’s basically chicken wire on the other side instead of an air filter.


Top

Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Reply to topic  [ 4166 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179 ... 278  Next



Postflight (Bottom Banner)

You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Jump to:  

Terms of Service | Forum FAQ | Contact Us

BeechTalk, LLC is the quintessential Beechcraft Owners & Pilots Group providing a forum for the discussion of technical, practical, and entertaining issues relating to all Beech aircraft. These include the Bonanza (both V-tail and straight-tail models), Baron, Debonair, Duke, Twin Bonanza, King Air, Sierra, Skipper, Sport, Sundowner, Musketeer, Travel Air, Starship, Queen Air, BeechJet, and Premier lines of airplanes, turboprops, and turbojets.

BeechTalk, LLC is not affiliated or endorsed by the Beechcraft Corporation, its subsidiaries, or affiliates. Beechcraft™, King Air™, and Travel Air™ are the registered trademarks of the Beechcraft Corporation.

Copyright© BeechTalk, LLC 2007-2025

.saint-85x50.jpg.
.traceaviation-85x150.png.
.8flight logo.jpeg.
.b-kool-85x50.png.
.LogAirLower85x50.png.
.tempest.jpg.
.ocraviation-85x50.png.
.jandsaviation-85x50.jpg.
.kingairnation-85x50.png.
.MountainAirframe.jpg.
.Wingman 85x50.png.
.BT Ad.png.
.sierratrax-85x50.png.
.sarasota.png.
.daytona.jpg.
.planelogix-85x100-2015-04-15.jpg.
.gallagher_85x50.jpg.
.garmin-85x200-2021-11-22.jpg.
.aerox_85x100.png.
.shortnnumbers-85x100.png.
.temple-85x100-2015-02-23.jpg.
.tat-85x100.png.
.CiESVer2.jpg.
.jetacq-85x50.jpg.
.KingAirMaint85_50.png.
.stanmusikame-85x50.jpg.
.blackwell-85x50.png.
.headsetsetc_Small_85x50.jpg.
.wat-85x50.jpg.
.geebee-85x50.jpg.
.Wentworth_85x100.JPG.
.rnp.85x50.png.
.dbm.jpg.
.Elite-85x50.png.
.Latitude.jpg.
.ABS-85x100.jpg.
.Plane AC Tile.png.
.suttoncreativ85x50.jpg.
.blackhawk-85x100-2019-09-25.jpg.
.puremedical-85x200.jpg.
.mcfarlane-85x50.png.
.avnav.jpg.
.pdi-85x50.jpg.
.bullardaviation-85x50-2.jpg.
.v2x.85x100.png.
.AAI.jpg.
.concorde.jpg.
.airmart-85x150.png.
.holymicro-85x50.jpg.
.camguard.jpg.
.AeroMach85x100.png.
.bpt-85x50-2019-07-27.jpg.
.midwest2.jpg.
.kadex-85x50.jpg.
.boomerang-85x50-2023-12-17.png.
.KalAir_Black.jpg.
.SCA.jpg.
.aviationdesigndouble.jpg.
.performanceaero-85x50.jpg.