Art K
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2012
- Messages
- 218
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Hi, ownthesky2010,
I caught your last post and was reminded of a portion of Herschel Smith's book "A History of Aircraft Piston Engines", and yes I read the whole book. Chapter ten is about the opposed engine. He talks of a 1917 Lawrance C-2, "It set at naught the basic advantage of the opposed engine by using a single throw crank." He also used Mickey Mouses name in vain and mentioned Newtons first law. The gist of this was that both pistons going back and forth shook the airplane apart. I would suggest a two throw crank, although not as simple to make, the pistons going back and forth cancels each others movement out, making the engine fairly well balanced.
Art
I caught your last post and was reminded of a portion of Herschel Smith's book "A History of Aircraft Piston Engines", and yes I read the whole book. Chapter ten is about the opposed engine. He talks of a 1917 Lawrance C-2, "It set at naught the basic advantage of the opposed engine by using a single throw crank." He also used Mickey Mouses name in vain and mentioned Newtons first law. The gist of this was that both pistons going back and forth shook the airplane apart. I would suggest a two throw crank, although not as simple to make, the pistons going back and forth cancels each others movement out, making the engine fairly well balanced.
Art