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		rholder(at)avnet.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 1:37 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				I have fitted and test flown my oil thermostat. I fear
 that it is faulty.
 
 I was expecting that the oil temperature would go quickly
 up to 80 or so and stay there whatever I did, unless I
 went to a really hot place when the temp would go up.
 
 I spoke to Steve Slade who currently owns G-MIKI the
 microlight that Nigel Beale put the original thermostat
 on, and on which the mod 10179 is based. He confirmed that
 his plane temp goes to 80 and stays there.  he also said
 that the original purpose of the mod was to get the oil
 warming up quicker.
 
 My oil did not warm up quicker. On take-off the
 temperature rose to 95 on a very cold day (3 degrees),
 then it dropped to 60 in the cruise. 60 is where it used
 to cruise on cold days without the thermostat and with
 almost all the radiator blanked off.
 
 My feeling is that the waxstat in the thermostat is
 opening too early and is not opening enough so that some
 oil bypasses the cooler even at over 90.
 
 Anyone got any suggestions ? I am contemplating ripping
 the whole thing off and getting another one.
 
 I relate the sad tale now in case anyone else has bought
 the device and hasn't fitted it yet. The waxstat needs
 checking (dump in a saucepan of water, heat slowly and I
 believe it should start to expand at around 75 degrees and
 be fully extended (12 mm ?) by 85).
 
 If anyone has fitted one I would appreciate feed-back as
 to whether their oil temp goes quickly up to 80 and stays
 there !
 
 TIA
 
 Richard
 G-OWWW High Cross
 
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		mikenjulie.parkin(at)btop Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 2:20 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Richard,
 
 Please don't shoot!!!  But I have to ask the obvious - you are sure it is 
 connected correctly??
 
 regards,
 
 Mike
 
 PS.  Is it OK to fit this Mod (PFA wise), or are you 'pressing to test'.
 
 ---
 
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		rholder(at)avnet.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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		ami(at)mcfadyean.freeserv Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 1:02 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				The temperature at which the waxstat opens is usually stamped on the end of 
 the insert (located inside the thermostat).
 
 Duncan McF.
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		rholder(at)avnet.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 1:17 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Duncan McFadyean wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   The temperature at which the waxstat opens is usually
  stamped on the end of the insert (located inside the
  thermostat).
 
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 Yes, it may be. I will look at it when I strip it all out
 again ! Would the waxstat go from closed to open in just a
 few degrees - so if it is stamped say 80 it would start at
 75 and be fully open at 85, or would it be even tighter
 controlled than that ?
 
 Thanks !
 
 Richard
 
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		ami(at)mcfadyean.freeserv Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 1:45 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Yes they do (i.e. open very rapidly within a few degrees) around the 
 temperature that they are 'rated' for, and close less rapidly. If you try it 
 in water you'll see what I mean; an element rated at 80 will be doing next 
 to nothing at around 78, then be fully open by about 82.
 Having to dig deep in memory for this one!
 If the temperature at any time exceeds 140 C then the wax element is 
 permanently destroyed.
 
 Duncan McF.
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		mikenjulie.parkin(at)btop Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 1:55 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Duncan,
 
 If the waxstat fails does it fail open, closed or in the position where it 
 failed.
 
 regards,
 
 MP
 
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		pete(at)lawless.info Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 3:00 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				If this is the inline oil stat available from Think Automotive the
 figure they gave me were starts to open 73 degrees fully open 79
 degrees.
 
 Pete
 
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		ami(at)mcfadyean.freeserv Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 3:16 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				More often in the open position, AFAIK.
 Cars with failed thermostats tend to run cold, rather than the reverse.
 
 Duncan McF.
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		nigel_graham(at)btclick.c Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 1:13 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Wax thermostats used in cars were notorious for failing closed (overheating 
 the engine) since the wax capsule would split and the wax escape. It was the 
 bi-metallic thermostats that failed safe.
 
 I have no idea how this oil 'stat fails but would guess closed.
 
 Nigel
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		ptag.dev(at)tiscali.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 7:43 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Hi! Nigel
 I've been keeping "schtumn" because I'm not a Rotax Buff. BUT.... this
 thermostat idea on oil systems gives me the creeps what if ......!
 Much better to focus on a pilot control facility like metering the oil
 to the cooler by pilot controlled valve. I know this is something else
 to constantly do but you should be always "heads up " on P's and T's
 anyway.
 I have a system of P1 controlled oil to cooler metered or even off
 completely and the engine still gets full flow supply at all settings.
 I rarely need to engage the cooler but I have an all air cooled engine.
 Regards
 Bob Harrison G-PTAG Europa MKI Jabiru 3300 
 
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		nigel_graham(at)btclick.c Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 9:21 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Hi Bob,
 
 I was watching this thread with interest. The thought of a thermostat on an 
 oil system that relies entirely on crankcase pressure for the return (912/4) 
 scares the willies out of me too!
 As I understrand it, the Rotax oil thermostat by-passes the radiator but 
 maintains circulation, unlike the car water system that stops (reduces) the 
 flow.
 If I were going to control the oil temperature, I would have a 
 temperature-transducer controlled vane adjusting the airflow through the 
 radiator - not the oil........much less risky.
 Sounds like a mission for Mark Burton (should he choose to accept)!
 
 Nigel
 
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		rholder(at)avnet.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 10:05 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Hi team
 
 I am reporting back after further investigation.
 
 To Nigel Graham, the crankcase pressure does return the
 oil to the oil tank. Wierd but it does work. However the
 oil cooler is NOT in that return. The oil cooler is
 between the oil tank and the oil pump, which SUCKS from
 the tank, through the cooler. The oil thermostat provides
 a by-pass of the cooler - and indeed as the cooler
 provides significant restriction to the sucking the
 by-pass might well provide MORE oil to the pump. If the
 thermostat failed closed then there would be plenty of
 oil, but it would get hot rapidly.
 
 I reported on Sunday about my experience. My oil went to
 95 in a climb to 2500 feet and then down to 60 in the
 cruise on a very cold (2 C) day. Neither was what I was
 expecting and so today I ripped the thermostat out,
 dropping only a small amount of oil on the hanger floor  
 
 I checked the installation and I was happy I had done it
 right.
 
 So I brought the wax-stat home and put it in a saucepan on
 the AGA. Eventually I found a Celsius thermometer and
 tried it. Then I put an elastic band on it to provide a
 return spring force. It worked exactly as I expected -
 opening at about 73 and being fully open at 80. As per spec.
 
 So I did some thinking, and drew it past Simon Nash who
 has part-installed his. We decided that it is likely that
 the sealing of the ports in the thermostat has been
 compromised by the required drilling out of the ports to
 10 mm. If in the hot position the disk that seals off the
 by-pass doesn't quite block it off then oil will prefer to
 go the by-pass route and not go via the cooler.
 
 I have a "cunning plan" to check on this and I will report
 back soon after it is installed and tested. It should
 prove the problem of heating up too much in the climb. The
 cruise coldness may be a by-product, but I can live with
 that for now as it was a VERY cold day when I test flew
 it, and I had no baffles whatsoever on the radiators.
 
 In the mean-time - I would recommend anyone who has bought
 one of these thermostats to avoid drilling out the ports
 until I report back. Or if you have done two ports then
 DON'T do the other two.
 
 Another lateral thought - does anyone know if oil coolers
 ever have a required direction of flow ?
 
 Richard Holder, who can envisage installation, and then a
 further removal and re-installation. In the brrrrrrrr cold !
 
 G-OWWW, High Cross
 
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		rholder(at)avnet.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 10:55 am    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				josok wrote:
 
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   OA, the German Rotax dealer has as a Rotax addon an oil
   thermostat available. This is a thermostat with 4 ! 
  connections, and only changes the oil flow through the 
  radiator or direct. So, if this thermostat is closed, 
  the oil pressure does not even have to deal with the 
  resistance of the radiator.  If this thermostat would 
  hang closed, you would notice a rise in oil 
  temperature, if it stays open, oil would not reach a 
  sufficient temperature.  IMHO, a manual operated flap 
  or anything that adds to (this new-by) pilot workload 
  is more error-prone.
 
 | 	  
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   Regards,
  
  Jos Okhuijsen
 
 | 	  
 Is that OA the dealer ? I thought the dealer was
 Franz-aircraft, who do indeed have an oil thermostat. Not
 approved here, but it works in exactly the same way as the
 one that is approved.
 
 They also have a water thermostat and we have no
 equivalent of that approved ;-(
 
 By the way - the oil going through the oil cooler (and the
 thermostat) is not under pressure, it is being SUCKED into
 the engine from the tank by the oil pump. Do not put the
 oil cooler in the oil line between the sump and the oil tank.
 
 Richard
 
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		ptag.dev(at)tiscali.co.uk Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 1:18 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Ok Jos thanks for that, However what if the cooler breaks and you start
 loosing oil (I had that problem but only on a half hour flight!) With
 mine the cooler is in circuit only a miniscule period of time so a leak
 would be kept to the absolute minimum when you landed you'd get to
 notice before the "donkey" packed up aloft !
 
 I've just seen Richards message as to where the cooler on the Rotax is
 situated so similar may apply except it would be pulling air in ......
 don't you believe it IMHO oil would still p.... out !
 Regards
 Bob Harrison  G-PTAG Europa MKI/Jabiru 3300
 
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		ami(at)mcfadyean.freeserv Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 2:56 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Bob,
 The recent problems with leaking joints on the Rotax-supplied oil coolers 
 (MPD issued by PFA) resulted in air leaking in and loss of oil-circuit 
 priming, not oil leaking out.
 
 Before you you respond (!), don't forget that Jab's (particularly the less 
 smoothly running 2200) have suffered numerous oil cooler circuit failures on 
 a number of aircraft types (Rans S6 and Renegade to name two).
 This is has a lot to do with the oil cooling circuit running at full system 
 pressure.
 
 Duncan McF.
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		Gilles.Thesee(at)ac-greno Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 3:22 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		   If this thermostat would hang closed, you would notice a rise in oil temperature, if it stays open, oil would not reach a sufficient temperature.  IMHO, a manual operated flap or anything that adds to (this new-by) pilot workload is more error-prone.
 
   
 
 Hi all,
 | 	  
 
 Although the following doesn't apply to a Europa, it may be of interest 
 regarding Rotax 914 setups.
 In our project, we decided to make a cowling from scratch, and I had the 
 opportunity to design a radiator duct with cowl flaps. A short summary 
 of the design principle can be viewed on my "wind tunnel" web pages.
 
 The airplane has been flight tested from -14C to +37C with perfect 
 ease of temperature adjustment. Operating the cowl flap is a breeze, and 
 you always have a few minutes to adjust temperatures to your taste 
 within 5C of target.
 We had considered using a thermostat, but whereas it solves the 
 temperature issue, the drag is always high. On the other hand, drag 
 decreases when you close the flap.
 Besides, if the thermostat fails in the by-pass position, the 
 temperature rise will be fast and very harmful to the engine.
 
  From the messages about blocking the radiators, or adding thermostat to 
 cowl flaps, I have the feeling that the cooling of Europas could benefit 
 from this little research work.
 
 FWIW,
 Regards,
 Gilles Thesee
 Grenoble, France
 http://contrails.free.fr
 
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		pete(at)lawless.info Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 3:27 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				Evening All
 
 Think Automotive sent me a drawing of the oil stat with some hand
 written annotations.  As well as the temperature figures they clearly
 marked flow from and to the engine and flow to and from the oil cooler.
 On the diagram if you hold the stat so that the 2 screws that hold it
 together have their heads at the top, then turn it so that the higher
 pipe it to the right.  Now the right hand pipes are engine and the left
 had pair the cooler.  Looking at the diagram the other way round would
 have oil pressure pushing up the diaphragm and potentially opening the
 stat.  I will send a TIF of the diagram off forum.
 
 Regards
 
 Pete
 
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		ami(at)mcfadyean.freeserv Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 3:46 pm    Post subject: Oil Thermostat | 
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				The heated and expanded wax causes the thermostat to open against spring 
 pressure. As the wax cools, the valve is closed by the spring pressure, not 
 "suction" of contracting wax, which would probably cavitate anyway.
 As such, when the wax is lost there is nothing to push the valve open and 
 the spring returns it to the closed position, so failing in that position.
 
 I agree that the older mechanical versions fail closed.
 
 The Mocal version of oil thermostat bypasses the cooler when "closed".
 
 Duncan McF
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