Webinar: Rotax 912 Engines and Sonex Aircraft

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ธ.ค. 2022
  • Sonex, LLC Owner and President Mark Schaible will talk about Rotax 912 series engine installations in the Sonex aircraft worldwide fleet including customer-designed installations through the years, various mounting types, and the Sonex factory’s own installation of the 912iS in the 2022 One Week Wonder. Mark will also give installation, cost, and performance comparisons of Rotax 912 engines in Sonex aircraft vs. other Sonex-approved engine installations. This webinar qualifies for FAA WINGS and AMT credit.
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ความคิดเห็น • 22

  • @xeriotti
    @xeriotti ปีที่แล้ว +1

    54:16 Thats my little bird!!! Thanks for making it part of the video... The answers: Thats actually a 4 to 1 equal lenght exhaust i made, I live in Argentina and have no access to stock parts (either becuase of local laws or for prohibitive prices) so we have to make things work by ourselves!!
    Collector tube with no muffling at all. Sounds AMAZING... Pretty much like a sportbike. Havnt flown it yet im fugiring out cowling and cooling. The radiator in the bottom corresponds to the oil circuit, water radiator is vertically mounted at the left of the engine and i will fit a naca vent pretty much like that beautiful sonex from Sweden. Feel free to ask anything. Im here to learn. And if i can make anyone elses plane safer, faster, cheaper or easier to build that will make me really happy :)

  • @garynoss818
    @garynoss818 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for posting on TH-cam! It gives us a chance to ask questions/ make observations over time and not just during Webinars.

  • @russellduffy
    @russellduffy ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks for the presentation, and the background development. I've been flying a Onex with the 912, originally 80 HP, and now maybe 95ish. I made my own firewall mount to use the ring mount. My cowl and installation will probably never be finished, but fortunately I enjoy the development part more than flying I think. BTW, I'll be interested to see how long that muffler wrap lasts. I had the best you could buy on my Toucan exhaust, and it crumbled in less than 20 hrs. I ended up switching to stainless shields.

  • @russellesimonetta9071
    @russellesimonetta9071 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Uhh,, I think your new highwing is going to be your best seller! Don,t go for stol back country!! That segment is hugely saturated!!! Stick to a high speed cross country machine liked the Tailwind but modernized!

  • @anthonyrstrawbridge
    @anthonyrstrawbridge ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi I'm Anthony
    I'm generally off topic poking the hornets nest or imagining big things in R&D.
    Quite frankly I'm sucking lemons with where Sonex has taken the Aerovee platform development. Probably nothing is worse than how I feel about stalling takeoff of the electric motor development. Quite frankly, my vision for the 80 HP Aerovee was ( is) to increase efficiency, power generation, and endurance while reducing
    cooling demands. I think it takes three systems to accomplish this goal using proven technologies respective to electrical, mechanical, and waste heat energy conversion.
    I think it's important in todays economy and in consideration of natural resources and environmental goals to satisfy part of all these objectives. Let's face it, the combustion engine struggles to exceed an efficiency of less than 50% - 35% at sea level. If we convert the mechanical horsepower to actual KW a reasonable power output estimate is 30-15 KW. However, the waste heat of this engine is capable of producing more than 30KW of energy. Scavenging the waste heat while simultaneously reducing the needed engine cooling is effectively accomplished by transferring the heat through a heat exchanger into water or steam electrical power generation via the turbine. This harnesses the energy and provides a combined efficiency exceeding 70-90%. Storing that energy in a small lightweight LFP battery bank and delivering it to a crankshaft mounted inductive or brushless dc motor configuration. Engine loading decreases, waste heat management increases, power output increases0

    • @daronotwell7025
      @daronotwell7025 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Airplanes are fun.

    • @fast_richard
      @fast_richard ปีที่แล้ว

      Please post pictures of your prototype, no matter how crude and preliminary. I assume this is not just pulled out of your nether regions. This after all is experimental aviation, not airy fairy fantasy.

    • @anthonyrstrawbridge
      @anthonyrstrawbridge ปีที่แล้ว

      @@fast_richard Thanks for your interest.

    • @ZeeCaptainRon
      @ZeeCaptainRon ปีที่แล้ว

      So captain clueless, you want steam power in a LSA, with all the other BS required to do it? Perhaps you should buy the company and put your money where your "dreams" are. Better yet, start your own company and stuff all that crap into an airframe. Something else that will literally NEVER get off the ground. I am guessing that if you went to college, your degree was a BA in design and not engineering, amiright?

  • @tinolino58
    @tinolino58 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Rotax probably the most expensive engine per horsepower!

    • @xeriotti
      @xeriotti ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Most reliable engine for experimentals i can think about...

    • @tinolino58
      @tinolino58 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@xeriotti you may upgrade your information ☀️

    • @joeshmooo5327
      @joeshmooo5327 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tinolino58 like to hear what information you have that disputes this? Never seen a rotax installation having pilots worried about EGT temps etc. No it just starts and flys

    • @tinolino58
      @tinolino58 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@joeshmooo5327 Ask the majority of Zenith builders 😇

    • @markg4459
      @markg4459 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not really when you consider how long they are expected to last. Rotax ULS (100 hp) goes for $26,800. The ULPower 260 (97 hp) goes for $22,345, the ULPower 260is (107 hp) is selling for $23,980. BUT you need to also consider the TBO. Rotax gives a TBO of 2000 hrs. So yes, you pay a little bit more for the Rotax but also get another 500 hrs than the ULPower engines for just 3-4 thousand dollars.
      Aerovee engines are less expensive and don't even publish a TBO...but are expected to last, according to the company selling them, only between 700-1200 hrs depending on use.

  • @tigerbite82
    @tigerbite82 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    First

  • @ZeeCaptainRon
    @ZeeCaptainRon ปีที่แล้ว +2

    12 minutes in, still no rotax... Cutting to the chase, so y'all don't waste anymore time, it's a rotax bash session and all recommendations are steering elsewhere. I quit watching at 20min.