Having built the Whittle V8, I have developed a taste for scale (ish) engines for flying models.
I am attracted to early aircraft, so inevitably a rotary will happen sooner or later.
I have looked at designs for 'true' scale rotaries, such as the Bently BR2 and the Gnome. However, I would like to build something at a smaller scale, as I don't have the space or inclination for 1/4 scale model aircraft.
Thus, I embarked on a project to design a somewhat simplified rotary with the intention that it should be practical for use in a flying model.
My design looks like a Gnome 9N monosoupape. It has a displacement of 28.6cc and is 5" (125mm) in diameter.
The original Gnome engine was 4 stroke with induction through complex valves in the pistons. Later versions used piston ported induction through a series of holes in the base of the barrels. Both variants had no effective throttle control, the engine being slowed by selectively cutting ignition to some cylinders. None of this lends itself to use in a flying model, so I set about creating a more conventional system within the GNome layout.
What I have come up with is a uniflow 2 stroke. The single valve in the cylinder head controls exhaust exit. Induction to the cylinder is controlled by piston porting, using transfer ports similar to conventional 2 strokes.
The rotary arrangement does not produce any nett crankcase displacement to draw in mixture and compress it for transfer to the cylinders, so I had to create a mechanism for that function.
The design uses short connecting rods and crosshead guides similar to steam engines. The crosshead connects to the piston by a round shaft which passes through a bush in a plate which isolates the lower part of the barrel from the crankcase space. Thus, when the piston rises and falls, the space between the underside of the piston and the bush plate acts as the induction pump. Admission of fuel / air mixture to this pump chamber is controlled by a port in the hollow crankshaft, as seen in most model aircraft 2 stroke engines.
The carburettor will be fitted to the rear end of the hollow crankshaft, which is of course stationary and will also carry the engine mount to the airframe.
I am attracted to early aircraft, so inevitably a rotary will happen sooner or later.
I have looked at designs for 'true' scale rotaries, such as the Bently BR2 and the Gnome. However, I would like to build something at a smaller scale, as I don't have the space or inclination for 1/4 scale model aircraft.
Thus, I embarked on a project to design a somewhat simplified rotary with the intention that it should be practical for use in a flying model.
My design looks like a Gnome 9N monosoupape. It has a displacement of 28.6cc and is 5" (125mm) in diameter.
The original Gnome engine was 4 stroke with induction through complex valves in the pistons. Later versions used piston ported induction through a series of holes in the base of the barrels. Both variants had no effective throttle control, the engine being slowed by selectively cutting ignition to some cylinders. None of this lends itself to use in a flying model, so I set about creating a more conventional system within the GNome layout.
What I have come up with is a uniflow 2 stroke. The single valve in the cylinder head controls exhaust exit. Induction to the cylinder is controlled by piston porting, using transfer ports similar to conventional 2 strokes.
The rotary arrangement does not produce any nett crankcase displacement to draw in mixture and compress it for transfer to the cylinders, so I had to create a mechanism for that function.
The design uses short connecting rods and crosshead guides similar to steam engines. The crosshead connects to the piston by a round shaft which passes through a bush in a plate which isolates the lower part of the barrel from the crankcase space. Thus, when the piston rises and falls, the space between the underside of the piston and the bush plate acts as the induction pump. Admission of fuel / air mixture to this pump chamber is controlled by a port in the hollow crankshaft, as seen in most model aircraft 2 stroke engines.
The carburettor will be fitted to the rear end of the hollow crankshaft, which is of course stationary and will also carry the engine mount to the airframe.