Hi all, I want to ask anyone if the regret removing the excess flange from the case. It looks to me as if the case could lose some strength near the mount holes. In the attached photo you can see the plugs I made for the unused pushrod holes. My buddy Jim was quick to tease me about their facile appearance. I couldn't get my calipers in to measure the hole size, and I didn't have a snap guage, so it took me 3 tries to sneak up on it! Then I spent an hour with three grades of sandpaper to remove the tool marks and achieve that shiny appearance. Insert teasing here....John Harmon
Steve, What page are you referring too? I inserted the image here hopefully it shows up better, it's on my google+ hopefully I got the share right.Hi all, I want to ask anyone if the regret removing the excess flange from the case. It looks to me as if the case could lose some strength near the mount holes. In the attached photo you can see the plugs I made for the unused pushrod holes. My buddy Jim was quick to tease me about their facile appearance. I couldn't get my calipers in to measure the hole size, and I didn't have a snap guage, so it took me 3 tries to sneak up on it! Then I spent an hour with three grades of sandpaper to remove the tool marks and achieve that shiny appearance. Insert teasing here....John Harmon
Thanks Les... Hey are my pictures showing up okay? They are on my Google+ and I've never shared them before.JH
I appreciate all the information that is being shared on this site and I am currently going through everything I can on the old Yahoo site. I hope they don’t close it before the information is absorbed. My user name is Sparrow and I have received the LE XL plans about 2 weeks ago. Any of you that have been flying your LEs for a while with the Better ½ VW please chime in with pictures of your engine mounting and considerable experience regarding the personal manufacture of a flying ½ VW. I would certainly appreciate any and all information. I do pay attention and I try not to make errors that have already been hammered out by others. I always believe that is one has the time and can do it, get informed and take notes then dive in. I must admit I did have concerns regarding mounting the engine on the back flange. The flange itself is seeing a bending stress loading which can lead to a fatigue failure if the stresses exceed about 65% of the materials yield strength for any length of time. The down side of using nonferrous material is that the fatigue life of it is finite. At some point in the future the cyclic loaded elements will eventually fail in fatigue if the stresses are high enough. Steel is different in that a calculated infinite life can be made. This is why I am interested in pictures from any and all that have high hour engine applications on the air frame and haven’t experienced any fatigue cracking. I have noticed, when viewing aircraft standard engine mounting that successful mounts are made by securing the bolts to the engine so the bolts are in shear and not creating a flexing of a thin member. Care in mounting the engine must certainly be taken to not introduce any additional stress into the flange caused by mounting. Continuous compressive stresses are fine but anything that creates a bending load has to be considered an item that must be minimized. Careful balancing to eliminate vibration is a must to help prevent the introduction of combined flexing and shearing loads at the flange. The rubber mounting will allow for a way to snub some of the strains produced by the stress and help isolate them from the flange. Just my 2 cents. I would also be interested in prop specifications, RMP at WOT (wide open throttle), carb type and size, cylinder bore and stroke used and the engine case you stared out with. Has anyone tapped out the holes with the appropriate pipe thread size tap and just screwed in a pipe plug with some Loctite® Threadlocker Red 271™ which is designed for the permanent locking and sealing of threaded fasteners? I have considered doing this and assembling the pipe plug to case and marking the plug extension into the case and then removing it and cutting off all plug that is not actually with thread contact to the case. Just to keep some of the weight off. As an additional side note, we are dealing with dissimilar material and the coefficient of thermal expansion is different, or could be if using different materials. This link takes you to the page that has the listing of thermal coefficients: http://www.repairengineering.com/coefficient-of-thermal-expansion.html If the case is magnesium and the temperature change is 200 Degrees F then the case will grow 0.00276” /”. If you had a piece of Magnesium and it was 2” long then it would grow or shrink 0.00552” in a 200 degree F change in temperature. Aluminum is 0.00256”/” in a 200 degree change and steel is 0.00145”/” in a 200 degree F change in temperature. I only bring this up because the forum thread talked about plug loosening up and the thermal change from room temperature to operating temperature will change the press fit to a no interference fit if the proper materials and proper press fit levels were not achieved at room temperature. It gets loose when it heats up if you are not using a magnesium plug. Someone said they used electrical plugs to close the lifter rod tube holes in the case. Most of the electrical plugs are Zinc plugs that have been injection molded. This is actually a better choice because the thermal expansion coefficient of Zinc is 0.00336”/” in 200 degrees F. If you use a Zinc plug it will get tighter in the Magnesium case as the temperature changes upward. If it happens to go down it will lose the initial fit and the clearances will get larger. Do all your fitting of Zinc plugs to the case when it is cold and the operating temperature will be higher than the assembly temperature. Just a side note, the SR-71 leaks fuel on the ground at ambient temperature and the tanks don’t seal up until it reaches the thermal operating envelope it was designed to play in. Another thermal compensation, by way of engineering, in the VW engine happens to bethe thermal characteristic changes do require the main bearings in a magnesium cased engine to be kept from spinning by use of a dowel pin because the temperature increase causes loss of compressed fit. In regular cast iron blocks the bearings are held in place by a calculated crush height of the ½ shell bearings as the main cap is torqued down. The normal automotive crush height is between 0.0004” and 0.0008” interference fit. Another piece of trivia just falls onto the page. If you work in automotive engineering for over 40 years, stuff rubs off. Many thanks to the group in advance. Kind regards,John Leake1409 Briarwood Dr. Blacksburg, VA 24060-2663Cell # 540 641 5056Retired since 2007