Airplane Engine
#1
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Airplane Engine
Can i fit an airplane engine into my t-maxx? i was thinking that they would provide a lot more power than any truck engine because you can get .90 engines and stuff like that.
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RE: Airplane Engine
there has been a recent post to this question either here or the plane forum. Fact is that a plane engine is a four stroke and have lower rpms. Read the post it hepls loads!
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RE: Airplane Engine
ORIGINAL: Jocke88
there has been a recent post to this question either here or the plane forum. Fact is that a plane engine is a four stroke and have lower rpms. Read the post it hepls loads!
there has been a recent post to this question either here or the plane forum. Fact is that a plane engine is a four stroke and have lower rpms. Read the post it hepls loads!
The way it works is the bigger displacement the lower the RPMs Gererally, But with more Torque,
So If you can get the gearing right and solve the Cooling issues, then Sure why not, it would work.
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RE: Airplane Engine
there are two main diffrences between air and car engines.
a: cooling. air based engines are assumed to be traveling through the air at a high rate so the cooling fin area is smaller. heli engines don't travel as much so have enlarged cooling heads were as car engines are under the body and not moving as fast so have the largest.
b: the RPM range. a airplane engine is designed to go between ~2000 - ~17,000 some car engines are cranking over 30,000. so the high end power will not be there.
other then that they are the same engine.
the .46s in some trucks are supposedly (only know from heresay) modified heli engines.
four stroke engines are used in some RC truck uses. the OS .40 is one popular model to use. OS also makes a 4 stroke .26 specifically for cars.
this has a RPM range from 2,200-12,000 (acording to the OS site) so you need to gear it up alot. BUT what you get is alot more low end torque out of it then a two stroke. (the LHS built a all aluminum custom tmaxx for a customer. even with all the weight and geared real high the FS-40 would wheelie with ease.)
the troubles of useing a airplane engine would be mouting it. cooling it.. then starting it (not many can be converted for pullstart.) but if you can go for it. should be interesting.
a: cooling. air based engines are assumed to be traveling through the air at a high rate so the cooling fin area is smaller. heli engines don't travel as much so have enlarged cooling heads were as car engines are under the body and not moving as fast so have the largest.
b: the RPM range. a airplane engine is designed to go between ~2000 - ~17,000 some car engines are cranking over 30,000. so the high end power will not be there.
other then that they are the same engine.
the .46s in some trucks are supposedly (only know from heresay) modified heli engines.
four stroke engines are used in some RC truck uses. the OS .40 is one popular model to use. OS also makes a 4 stroke .26 specifically for cars.
this has a RPM range from 2,200-12,000 (acording to the OS site) so you need to gear it up alot. BUT what you get is alot more low end torque out of it then a two stroke. (the LHS built a all aluminum custom tmaxx for a customer. even with all the weight and geared real high the FS-40 would wheelie with ease.)
the troubles of useing a airplane engine would be mouting it. cooling it.. then starting it (not many can be converted for pullstart.) but if you can go for it. should be interesting.