1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to closed circuit liquid cooling systems particularly for internal combustion engines, and more specifically relates to a monitoring system for providing timely and very early warning of anomalous conditions of the cooling system to the operator of the engine such that action may be taken to forestall damage to the engine and, in the case of an aircraft engine, prevent a life threatening emergency.
2. State of the Prior Art
Liquid cooled engines are frequently equipped with just a temperature gauge or temperature fault indicator for providing coolant temperature information to the operator of the engine. The information provided by a lone temperature gauge or fault indicator is inadequate for enabling timely and effective preventive action by an operator of the engine. In the event of a failure of some part of the engine's cooling system the resulting rise in temperature is reported well after the actual failure thereby losing any opportunity of dealing with the effects of the failure before critical temperatures have been reached. The engine cooling monitoring system is described below in the context of a liquid cooling system for horizontally opposed piston engines. However, the monitoring system of this invention is not limited to this or any other specific type of engine.
Many light aircraft in current service are powered by horizontally opposed piston engines. This type of engine is characterized by multiple pairs of piston cylinders, each pair being mounted to opposite sides of a common crankcase block with all of the cylinders lying in a common horizontal plane. This type of engine is most notably exemplified by the Lycoming series of aircraft engines, and also certain engines made by Continental. The Lycoming engines are made in four cylinder configurations and to a lesser extent in six and even eight cylinder configurations, and are in widespread use in the civil aviation and light aircraft community. These engines have gained wide acceptance and have remained essentially unchanged since about 1955. For purposes of this disclosure reference is made primarily to Lycoming engines because these are the most prominent example of the type of engine to which this invention is directed. It should be understood, however, that the liquid cooling system and conversion according to this invention is not limited to any particular make or brand of engine, nor for that matter, to aircraft engines. Aircraft engines have discrete cylinders each individually bolted to a common crankcase block. This is distinguished from an in-block cylinder engine where the cylinders are contained in a common engine block.
The Lycoming engine in its original factory configuration is cooled by an air stream produced by the turning propeller driven by the engine. Air intakes defined by a cowling arrangement around the engine admit propeller driven air from the atmosphere into the engine compartment and over the piston cylinders on either side of the engine. The air heated through contact with the engine is discharged to the atmosphere through vent openings in the fuselage. Each piston cylinder includes a cylinder sleeve which contains a reciprocating piston and a cylinder head which is assembled to the outer end of the cylinder. The cylinder head closes the top or outside end of the cylinder and also carries the intake and exhaust ports and valves which control the flow of the air/fuel mixture into the cylinder and the hot exhaust gases out of the cylinder. The cylinder head also carries the spark plug or plugs which ignite the air/fuel mixture. A system of push rods external to the cylinders and driven by a crank turning in the engine block actuates the intake and exhaust valves on each cylinder through a rocker assembly in the cylinder head in time with an electrical ignition system which fires the spark plugs. The exterior surfaces of the cylinder and the cylinder head carry a series of annular radiator fins which greatly increase the metal surface exposed to the air stream and thereby enhance the transfer of heat from the cylinder to the air stream.
The Lycoming engine also has an accessory pad on the crankcase block with an output drive shaft which conventionally provides a power take-off for various accessories such as an engine governor or a propeller pitch drive.
Air cooling of aircraft engines has proved popular because it eliminates the weight and reliability issues of the radiator, pump and hoses of a liquid cooling system. On the other hand, air cooling suffers from a number of disadvantages as well. Firstly, air flow through the engine compartment and against the cylinders introduces significant drag, Secondly, cooling of the various cylinders is uneven, some receiving significantly better airflow than others depending of the position of each cylinder and the cowling configuration in the particular fuselage. Thirdly, air cooled Lycoming and similar aircraft engines operate at elevated temperatures, typically in the range of 400–500.degree. F. and, although the engines are rated at 2000 hours before overhaul is needed, in actuality these engines have substantially shorter service lives. The conventional air cooled cylinder heads have a very large temperature differential across the head, between the intake valve and exhaust valve sides of the head. The intake side is cooled by the relatively cold air/fuel mixture flowing into the cylinder, while the hot combustion exhaust gases typically have a temperature of about 1500.degree. F. The result is a differential of some 200.degree. F. across the cylinder head, which often leads to cracking of the head within some 1100 hours of engine operation. This temperature differential can be reduced to about 25.degree. F. by water cooling the cylinder head. Shock cooling of the cylinders may occur in a nose down descent with the engine running at idle, where rapid air flow can cause a rapid drop of 200.degree. F. in cylinder head temperature while little heat is generated during idle operation, causing warpage of both the cylinders and the cylinder heads as one side shrinks relative to the other, the cylinders go out of round. Conversely, shock heating of 200.degree. F. to as much as 400.degree. F. of the cylinder head can happen during engine run-up prior to takeoff while the aircraft is stationary but developing high r.p.m. with little air flow over the engine. At temperatures of about 320.degree. F. and above the aluminum alloy of the cylinder head looses T6 hardness and becomes more susceptible to cracking. Critical failures involving cracks developing in the cylinder heads and sticking of exhaust valve stems become more likely under such circumstances. Air cooling cannot sufficiently cool the exhaust valve area leading to carbonization of valve stem lubrication oil. These carbon deposits eventually lead to valve sticking. Also, repeatedly raising and lowering the aluminum alloy temperature induces work hardening of the metal and is also a factor leading to cracking of the cylinder heads.
Liquid or water cooling, on the other hand, is conducive to lower engine operating temperatures and more even cooling of all engine cylinders with lower air cooling drag. An estimated ten percent increase in air speed is obtainable by converting a given air cooled engine to liquid cooling, while at the same time reducing engine operating temperature to approximately 190.degree. F. In turn, reduced engine temperatures permit an increase in engine compression ratio which translates into higher engine power output. Also, lower engine temperatures allows the engine to be run at lean fuel mix at low altitudes, even at sea level, without detonation and at higher power output than is possible with air cooling of the engine. A rich fuel mix, e.g. 19 gallons of fuel per hour (full rich), also operates to cool the engine, whereas a lean fuel mix such as 10 gallons per hour (a typical cruise lean mix) is more susceptible to detonation due to high engine temperature at oxygen rich low altitudes. Liquid cooling of the engine greatly reduces the chances of such detonation because of markedly lower combustion chamber surface temperatures.
A large number of light aircraft are in service with air cooled horizontally opposed piston engines which could benefit from conversion to liquid cooling. There is also a need for robust yet easy to install power plants in the experimental aviation, which presently relies on small, low power air cooled engines or, for higher power applications, on converted automobile engines which tend to be too heavy and run too fast for aircraft use. Heretofore, however, no conversion from air cooling to liquid cooling has received certification by the FAA because of the cost and difficulty of the certification process.
Many attempts have been made in the past to convert air cooled piston engines of various types to liquid cooling. However, because of the all important need for dependability in aircraft engines these attempted conversions have not found acceptance in the aviation industry, and only engines designed from the ground up for liquid cooling have found use in the aviation field. Even those engines have had limited success due to the limited cooling system monitoring instrumentation that is necessary for the unique operational requirements of an aircraft engine.
Exemplary of past efforts at conversion to liquid cooling are the patents issued to George U.S. Pat. No. 4,108,118; Wintercorn U.S. Pat. No. 1,725,121; and Ronen U.S. Pat. No. 5,755,190. George provides a water cooled replacement for an air cooled cylinder, but retains the air cooled cylinder head. Further, the replacement cylinder is encompassed by a water jacket made up of two semi-cylindrical halves which require difficult and unreliable sealing to each other and to the cylinder sleeve. Wintercorn provides water cooling by fitting a cylindrical container over the air cooled cylinder sleeve and circulating liquid coolant through the enclosed space defined between the sleeve and the outer container. The outer container does not cover the cylinder head which remains air cooled. Also, this approach suffers from the same sealing problems as the George conversion and is unsuitable for aircraft use. Ronen describes a more comprehensive solution by replacing the cylinder head with a replacement head which features internal coolant passages and an integral jacket which extends over the cylinder sleeve. Nonetheless, the Ronen conversion still requires problematic sealing of the jacket to the cylinder sleeve. Yet another source of difficulty with each of the three prior patents is the possibility of electrolytic corrosion between the external water jacket and the cylinder sleeve if these two elements are of different metallic composition. These prior art patents also fall short in that problems specific to conversion of multi-piston engines and to providing adequate cooling to the very hot exhaust side of the cylinder heads are not addressed. Water manifolding and coolant circulation within the cylinder is key to successful water cooling of the cylinders in the aircraft engine. These and other shortcomings render prior attempts at conversion to liquid cooling unsuitable for implementation in aircraft power plants.
A continuing need exists for a reliable liquid cooling system for horizontally opposed piston engines useful for conversion of existing air cooled engines and also for implementation as original equipment in newly manufactured engines.
The present invention addresses the aforementioned need by providing a method and components for a liquid cooling system for horizontally opposed piston engines and particularly but not exclusively for Lycoming horizontally opposed piston aircraft engines.
In its broader aspect this invention provides a minimally invasive method of converting to liquid cooling a horizontally opposed piston engine having air cooled finned piston cylinders mounted to a common crankcase block and air cooled cylinder heads on the finned piston cylinders. The novel method involves the steps of detaching each of the finned piston cylinders from the crankcase block together with the air cooled cylinder heads and substituting therefor a liquid cooled replacement cylinder comprising a unitary casting including a double walled jacket defining an annular coolant cavity having an open end and an opposite end closed by a head portion having intake and exhaust ports, the head portion including coolant passages in fluidic communication with the annular coolant cavity, and a coolant inlet and a coolant outlet on the jacket for circulating coolant through the coolant cavity and the coolant passages, and a cylinder sleeve fitted to the open end of the double walled jacket; mounting a coolant pump on an accessory pad of the engine and connecting an accessory drive shaft of the accessory pad for driving the pump; providing a radiator; and interconnecting the pump, the radiator, and the coolant inlet and coolant outlet of each replacement cylinder to make a closed coolant circuit.
The method of this invention may also include the step of orienting each replacement cylinder relative to the crankcase block such that each coolant inlet is near a lowermost point along a circumference of the annular coolant cavity and each coolant outlet is near an uppermost point along a circumference of the annular coolant cavity on each of the horizontally opposed pistons, whereby coolant flow through the annular cavity of each replacement piston is in a generally upward direction from the coolant inlet to the coolant outlet and convective flow of coolant through the annular cavity is maintained in the event of failure of the pump to thereby delay overheating of the engine.
This invention also contemplates a liquid cooled internal combustion engine having plural pairs of horizontally opposed pistons, each piston displaceable in a piston cylinder external to a common crankcase block, the engine assembled with each piston cylinder having a unitary casting including a double walled jacket defining an annular coolant cavity having an open end and an opposite end closed by a head portion having intake and exhaust ports, the head portion including coolant passages in fluidic communication with the annular coolant cavity and arranged for directing coolant into thermal proximity with the exhaust ports and returning coolant to the annular coolant cavity, and a coolant inlet and a coolant outlet on the jacket for circulating coolant through the coolant cavity and the coolant passages; a cylinder sleeve fitted to the open end of the double walled jacket; a radiator; and a pump directly gear driven by an accessory drive shaft of the engine for circulating coolant liquid through the unitary casting of each piston cylinder and the radiator thereby to dissipate heat from the piston cylinders to the environment through the radiator. The liquid cooled engine has an accessory pad and an accessory drive shaft on the crankcase block, the pump being mounted to the accessory pad and driven by the accessory drive shaft. The pump further comprises a step-up gear assembly between a rotor of the pump and the accessory drive shaft whereby the pump rotor turns at higher speed than the accessory drive shaft.
A more particular aspect of this invention is a replacement cylinder for use in providing liquid cooling to an air cooled internal combustion engine of the type having one or more piston cylinders exterior to a crankcase block. The replacement cylinder features a unitary casting including a double walled jacket defining an annular coolant cavity having an open end and an opposite end closed by a head portion having intake and exhaust ports, the head portion including coolant passages in fluidic communication with the annular coolant cavity, and a coolant inlet and a coolant outlet on the jacket for circulating coolant through the coolant cavity and the coolant passages; and a cylinder sleeve fitted to the open end of the double walled jacket. Preferably the cylinder sleeve is threaded to the unitary casting, the cylinder sleeve and unitary casting are of materials having dissimilar coefficients of thermal expansion, and the cylinder sleeve and unitary casting are fitted to each other in a compressive interference fit by differential thermal expansion. In the preferred for of the invention the cylinder sleeve and the unitary casting are threaded to each other and permanently joined in a fluid tight interference fit resulting from differential thermal contraction during cooling following hot assembly of the two parts. The unitary casting is preferably of aluminum and the cylinder sleeve is of steel.
The double walled jacket of the unitary casting has an outer wall and an inner wall both joined to the head portion and further joined along a common bottom, the annular coolant cavity being defined between the outer wall and the inner wall, with the inner wall being in thermal contact with a substantial portion of the cylinder sleeve such that coolant liquid circulating through the cavity cools the cylinder sleeve without coming into contact with the cylinder sleeve, whereby electrolytic corrosion is avoided between the casting and sleeve of dissimilar metals.
The double walled jacket may have interior fluid gating configured for diverting a substantial portion of coolant liquid entering the inlet into the coolant passages of the head portion thereby to provide liquid cooling to the exhaust port portion of the cylinder head. The fluid gating may preferentially divert coolant entering the jacket inlet into the head coolant passages over the annular coolant cavity.
It is preferred that the coolant inlet be near a lowermost point along a circumference of the annular coolant cavity and that the coolant outlet be near an uppermost point along a circumference of the annular coolant cavity on each of the horizontally opposed pistons, whereby coolant flow through the annular cavity is in a generally upward direction from the coolant inlet to the coolant outlet and convective flow of coolant through the annular cavity is maintained in the event of failure of the coolant pump thereby to delay overheating of the engine.
Yet another aspect of this invention is a cooling system instrumentation system and display having:
The point downstream may be at a thermostat connected downstream of the pump for controlling coolant flow through or for bypassing the radiator, and the relatively low coolant system pressure is desirably an adjustable pressure. For example, the relatively low coolant system pressure may be a pressure lower than 5 psi and the relatively high coolant temperature may be greater than 160.degree. F.
Still another aspect of the liquid cooled engine according to this invention is a coolant manifold comprising a T-fitting including a center tube attached to each coolant inlet and coolant outlet of the double walled jacket of the unitary casting, and a cross tube open at opposite ends; a ring seal at each of the opposite ends, a connecting tube inserted into the ring seals of mutually facing open ends of adjacent ones of the piston cylinders, and a hose connected to a first one of the cross tube ends and a plug closing a last one of the cross tube ends, one hose being connected to an outlet of the pump for delivering coolant to the cylinders, the other hose being connected for returning hot coolant to a thermostat. Preferably the T-fittings and the connector tubes are made of aluminum for lightweight.
According to another aspect of this invention an engine cooling monitoring system is disclosed for an engine having a liquid cooling system including a coolant pump for sustaining flow of liquid coolant in said cooling system. The novel monitoring system has a coolant temperature sensor; a first pressure sensor arranged and positioned for sensing a static pressure of the cooling system, logic circuits connected to the coolant temperature sensor and the first pressure sensor for detecting a first alarm condition indicative of below normal static coolant pressure coupled with an elevated coolant temperature and a second alarm condition indicative of static coolant overpressure; and an indicator connected for indicating the first alarm condition and the second alarm condition to an operator of the engine.
The monitoring system may further have a second pressure sensor arranged and positioned for sensing an output pressure of the coolant pump and logic circuits connected for deriving a difference pressure between the output pressure and the static pressure. An indicator such as a difference pressure gauge may be provided for indicating the difference pressure to the operator of the engine. The logic circuits may also be operative for detecting a third alarm condition indicative of a below normal difference pressure condition, and a suitable indicator may be connected for indicating the third alarm condition to the operator of the engine.
The engine cooling monitoring may have a coolant presence detector arranged and positioned in the cooling system for detecting a fourth alarm condition indicative of an absence of coolant liquid in contact with the coolant detector, and an indicator connected for indicating the fourth alarm condition to the operator of the engine.
The engine cooling monitoring system may also have an engine induction manifold pressure sensor for sensing a manifold pressure of the engine and logic circuits connected for suppressing the third alarm condition while sensing a relatively low manifold pressure. The relatively low manifold pressure may be a manifold pressure below a set point pressure of the engine.
The engine cooling monitoring system may further have one or more leak detection sensors positioned externally to the coolant circuit for detecting a fifth alarm condition indicative of escaping steam or liquid. For example, a leak detection sensor may be positioned for detecting steam or liquid leakage from a seal of the cooling system. Multiple leak detection sensors may be provided and connected in parallel to the logic circuits for providing the fifth alarm condition responsive to actuation of any one or more of the leak detection sensors by escaping steam or liquid.
In still another aspect of this invention an engine cooling monitoring system is provided for an internal combustion engine having a closed circuit liquid cooling system including a coolant pump for sustaining flow of liquid coolant in said cooling system, wherein the monitoring system has at least one leak detection sensor positioned for detecting steam or liquid leakage from a seal of the cooling system.
These and other improvements, features and advantages according to this invention will be better understood by reference to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
This invention provides a liquid cooling system which may be installed as a retrofit on existing air cooled engines and may also be installed as factory original equipment on newly manufactured engines. The cooling system is modular in nature and is easily expandable from a four cylinder engine to six and eight cylinder engines. For purposes of the following explanation the engine is a standard four cylinder parallel valve Lycoming O-360-A4A engine. The cooling system can be readily expanded for installation in a six cylinder Lycoming O-540 engine, an eight cylinder Lycoming O-720, as well as other engines. Liquid cooling and water cooling are interchangeable terms for purposes of this disclosure. The preferred coolant liquid is a 50:50 mixture of water and an antifreeze compound such as Ethylene Glycol or Polyethylene Glycol.
In the conventional air cooled Lycoming O-360-A4A engine each cylinder and cylinder head has exterior radiator fins which provide a large surface exposed to the stream of cool air for better dissipation of engine heat. The cylinder is formed as a unitary aluminum casting with its radiator fins, and the cylinder head is likewise made as a unit machined of steel with its own set of integral radiator fins. The finned cylinder head is screwed onto one end of the cylinder sleeve in an interference fit by hot assembly so that the two parts of dissimilar metals are locked after cooling, and the other end of the finned cylinder sleeve is bolted to the engine block. The finned head includes a set of intake and exhaust valves which alternately admit air/fuel mixture into the cylinder and then vent the hot gases resulting from combustion of the mixture which is ignited by spark plugs G also mounted on the cylinder head. Each valve consists of a valve stem E which reciprocates axially within the intake or exhaust port and has a valve head at one end of the stem which seats against a valve seat surface T to close the port opening. The valve stem is biased to an open or closed condition by a coil spring S coaxial with the valve stem. A valve train mechanism, which includes a rocker arm R actuated by a push rod D which in turn is driven by a cam shaft turning within the engine block. The elements designated by the capitalized letters above are common to the liquid cooled engine and are shown in
The design and operation of the various moving parts of the liquid cooled engine according to this invention is conventional and remains unchanged during conversion of the engine from air cooling to liquid cooling, and for this reason the operation of the engine need not be described in greater detail here.
With reference to the accompanying drawings wherein like elements are designated by like numerals,
Each of the principal components of the engine cooling system will now be described in greater detail below.
I. The Liquid Cooled Cylinders
Conversion of the conventional air cooled engine to liquid cooling requires that each of the conventional air cooled finned piston cylinders and cylinder heads be removed and replaced by a liquid cooled cylinder assembly 12 depicted in
The head casting 40 includes a cylinder head portion 44 formed integrally with an annular coolant jacket 50. The head portion 44 essentially follows the structure of the original finned cylinder head in so far as the location and dimensions of the various intake and exhaust ports, valve stem guides, spark plug mounting holes, push rod guides and supports, and mounting flanges for head covers. The entire valve train and spark plug arrangement in the liquid cooled head casting 40 is the same as in the air cooled cylinder head, and the valve train components and spark plugs are interchangeable between the air cooled and the liquid cooled cylinder heads. Likewise, the original fuel inlet lines and cylinder exhaust manifolds of the air cooled engine fit the corresponding opening on the liquid cooled cylinder head casting 40.
As best seen in
The interior of the head portion 44 is traversed by multiple internal coolant ducts 60 formed in the casting process. The coolant ducts 60 are of complex manifold geometry not readily depicted in two dimensional drawings, and
The coolant jacket 50 has one coolant inlet 62 and one coolant outlet 64 at approximately diametrically opposed locations around the jacket, each terminated at a flat surface on the exterior of the cylinder with screw holes for fastening the mounting flange of the T-fitting of the respective supply and return coolant manifolds, as will be explained below. The head coolant ducts 60 are in fluidic communication with the interior of the annular coolant jacket 50, i.e. with the annular coolant cavity 56. This fluidic communication is internal to the casting 40 and includes an internal inlet 65 only partially shown in
The coolant jacket portion 50 of the head casting 40 has a cylindrical bore with an inner surface 68, an open bottom end 72 and an opposite upper end closed by the head portion 44 of the casting. A screw thread 74a is cut near the upper end 76 of the replacement sleeve, and a mating interior thread 74b is cut in the interior surface 68 of the jacket 50. The interior diameter of the cylindrical surface 68 is slightly undersized, e.g. by approximately 0.005 inch, to the exterior cylindrical surface of the replacement cylinder sleeve 42. The two different metals have different coefficients of thermal expansion. The aluminum alloy head casting 40 expands to a greater degree than the steel sleeve 42. The steel sleeve 42 is assembled to the casting 40 by bringing the two elements to a temperature of approximately 300.degree. F., such that the head casting 40 expands sufficiently to accept the diameter of the sleeve 42 inside the open bottom of the cylindrical bore of coolant jacket 50 and permit the sleeve thread 74a to mate with the internal thread 74b of the casting. After the replacement sleeve and the replacement head casting cool to a lower temperature the two parts become joined in an interference fit and are locked together in a fluid tight cylinder assembly 12 at the mated threads 74a,b. During normal engine operation the cylinder assembly 12 is subjected to temperatures lesser than the 300.degree. F. assembly temperature, so that the cylinder assembly is effectively permanent. The replacement head casting 40 is cast in A356 aluminum alloy and then heat treated to T6 hardness. The water jacket/cylinder head assembly may then be “Wisodized”, a process similar to anodizing but which offers improved protection against corrosion and surface hardening resulting in low porosity. The replacement sleeve or cylinder liner 42 is machined of 4140 steel heat treated to a Rockwell hardness in the range of 28 to 32.
The replacement sleeve 42, best seen in
The jacket inlet and jacket outlet 62, 64, of coolant jacket 50 are located such that, when the cylinder assembly 12 is assembled to the engine block 14, the coolant inlet 62 is near a lowermost point along a circumference of the annular coolant cavity 56 and the coolant outlet 64, generally diametrically opposed to inlet 62, is near an uppermost point along the same circumference of the annular coolant cavity on each of the horizontally opposed pistons of the engine 10. That is, the coolant outlet 64 is well above the coolant inlet 62 on each coolant jacket 50 so that as hot coolant tends to rise against gravity by natural convection in the jacket cavity 56 it tends to rise towards and into the outlet 64 while at the same time drawing fresh coolant through the inlet 62 into the jacket cavity 56. This generally upward direction of flow from the coolant inlet 62 to the coolant outlet 64 is aided by convective upward flow of hot coolant through the annular cavity 56. This convective flow continues even if forced circulation of the coolant is interrupted, as in the event of failure of the coolant pump 20, and thereby delays, however slightly, overheating of the engine. In an emergency even a few seconds of additional engine power can provide a safety margin sufficient to make the difference between a survivable landing and a crash.
II) The Pump and Pump Drive Gear Box
Forced circulation of liquid coolant is provided by a coolant pump 20 which is a high volume, high pressure rotary impeller pump depicted in
The pump 20 is driven off of an accessory pad 22 which is conventionally provided on the Lycoming engine block. On a Lycoming O-360 or O-540 engine this accessory pad is commonly referred to as the governor accessory pad and, when looking directly at the rear of the engine block 14 it is the lower right accessory pad. The existing accessory pad 22 provides an output drive shaft D which, however, turns at a relatively low speed for the purpose of operating various accessories such as an engine speed governor or a propeller pitch drive. For purposes of driving the coolant pump 20 output speed of the accessory pad is too slow, and is raised to a higher r.p.m. by means of an intervening gear drive 70, also seen in
III) The Thermostat
Thermostat 30 in
The purpose of the thermostat is to route hot return coolant from the cylinders either directly back to the intake of the water pump via bypass hose 34 or to the radiator 32 for cooling. During engine warm-up at coolant temperatures below 190.degree. F. the thermostat remains closed causing the coolant to be returned directly to the pump intake. As the coolant reaches 190.degree. F. the thermostat opens gradually directing an increasing percentage of coolant to the radiator while at the same time gradually restricting bypass flow to the pump intake. The thermostat housing is preferably machined of an aluminum alloy and treated with an anticorrosive finish. The hose fittings may be of heat treated aluminum alloy with 37.degree. AN type hose fittings.
IV) The Radiator
The radiator 32 in
V) The Coolant Manifolds and Hoses
The coolant forced by the pump 20 is carried by hoses 26a, 26b to left and right coolant inlet manifolds respectively. The inlet manifolds in turn deliver the coolant to the coolant inlet 62 of each cylinder assembly 12. The hot coolant returns from the cylinders 12 via return manifolds 100a, 100b, seen on top of the cylinders 12 in
The floating connections of the opposite ends of connector tube 104 to the T-fittings permit slight movement of the tube's longitudinal axis approximately 2 or 3 degrees away from coaxial relationship with the cross tube 108 without breaking fluid tight sealing of the O-ring 114 nor release of snap ring 116. This feature is important because the engine block 14 is subject to severe torsional forces during normal flight of the aircraft, arising from interaction between the gyroscopic inertia of the propeller on the engine shaft and the lateral forces imposed on the engine block when the airframe is steered left or right by the rudder on the tail of the aircraft. The propeller constitutes a 50 to 100 lb. mass rotating at speeds from a few hundred to some 2,700 r.p.m and generates a sizable moment of angular inertia against any change in the plane of rotation of the propeller. Rudder and elevator action operate to turn the airframe along with the engine block, while the angular inertia of the rotating propeller mass resists such turning. The interaction of these forces causes the engine block to flex laterally left or right, or flex up and down to a degree sufficient to increase or decrease the spacing between the outer ends of the cylinders. In addition to these gyroscopic torsional forces the entire engine block 14 expands and contracts with changes in engine temperature, also changing the distance between the cylinders. These changes in cylinder spacing are slight, but must be accounted and allowed for if the coolant manifolds are to be safeguarded against leakage and eventual failure.
The several coolant hoses 26a,26b,28a,28b,34,36,38 mentioned earlier in connection with
VI) Instrumentation of the Liquid Cooling System
The liquid cooling system may be equipped with an instrumentation system and display which can provide useful information regarding the status and operation of the cooling system and thus contribute significantly to the safe operation of the aircraft. The most important data to the aircraft pilot is coolant temperature as a general indication of acceptable engine and cooling system operation; coolant pressure as an indication of the integrity of the various conduits which make up the cooling system, and verification of pump operation to confirm that coolant is being circulated through the system. Also desirable is the ability to set or adjust trigger points for each of these three factors for triggering a visual or audible alarm in the event of an abnormal condition with respect to any of these aspects of the engine cooling system.
The instrumentation includes a coolant temperature sensor 122 which may be mounted on the housing of thermostat 30, a pump output sensor 124 mounted on the pump housing for sensing coolant pressure at the pump outlet, and a coolant system pressure sensor 126 also mounted on the thermostat housing, downstream from the pump outlet pressure sensor.
These three sensors are connected to a display gauge 182 such as shown in
In general the coolant temperature provides only a coarse indication of cooling system operation. The indication of pump output pressure and of low system pressure provided by the gauge 126 provides additional critical information which might not be discovered if only coolant temperature is monitored. For example, the pilot may be warned of a low coolant condition or of pump failure on the ground during pre-flight engine run-up which is intended to bring the aircraft's engine to full operating temperature, thereby avoiding a subsequent in-flight emergency. Also an in-flight pump failure is indicated to the pilot immediately prior to noticeable engine temperature rise, giving the pilot invaluable time in which to perhaps reduce engine power to delay overheating and search for a suitable emergency landing site. Under emergency conditions a 30 second delay can be lifesaving.
The entire liquid cooling system adds an estimated 30 pounds of weight to the aircraft, including 3 gallons of coolant, a very reasonable trade-off for a substantial improvement in engine performance and service life. A chief advantage of the liquid cooling system retrofit described above is that the entire retrofit installation of the liquid cooling system can be performed on an existing aircraft without removing the engine from the airframe, i.e. the engine does not have to be taken out and put on a work bench, which greatly reduces the cost of the conversion to liquid cooling. A minimum number of engine parts are changed during the conversion, and in particular, no moving engine parts are changed, so that the proven reliability of the existing engine design is not impacted by the conversion. The liquid cooling system is modular in nature in that conversion of engines of more than four pistons is easily accomplished because each piston cylinder has its own discrete water cooling jacket, so that larger engines simply require the installation of additional jacketed cylinders and manifolds with additional T-fittings 102 and connector tubes 104 as needed for connection to the additional cylinders.
VII. Engine Cooling Monitoring System
With reference to the drawings,
The firmware 164 of logic circuits 160 is also configured for deriving a second alarm condition output 168 indicative of static coolant overpressure in response to receiving an abnormally elevated sensor output 124a from first pressure sensor 124 regardless of the coolant temperature sensed by temperature sensor 122. The threshold sensor output 124a at which the second alarm condition is derived is also preset in firmware 164.
The monitoring system 150 also has a second pressure sensor 126 arranged and positioned for sensing a coolant output pressure of the coolant pump 20. Sensor 126 provides a pressure sensor output signal 126a which is connected to logic circuits 160. Microprocessor 162 of logic circuits 160 is programmed by firmware 164 for deriving a pump input-output difference pressure output 176 representative of the difference between the pump output pressure sensed by pressure sensor 126 and the static coolant pressure sensed by sensor 124. A suitable indicator, such as a difference pressure gauge 182 visible to the engine operator, is driven by the pressure output signal 176 for indicating the pump input-output difference pressure to the operator of the engine 10.
The logic circuits 160 of the monitoring system 150 are also operative for detecting a third alarm condition indicative of a below normal difference pressure condition, based on the aforementioned sensor output signals 126a, 124a, to derive a third alarm condition signal 170. The detection and indication of the third alarm condition by indicator 180 may be in lieu of or in addition to indication of the difference pressure by means of difference pressure gauge 182.
In one embodiment of the invention, the engine cooling monitoring system 150 has an engine induction manifold pressure sensor 192 installed for sensing the manifold pressure of the engine 10. Sensor 192 is connected for providing a manifold pressure sensor signal 192a to logic circuits 160 where the signal is processed by microprocessor 162 under instructions of corresponding firmware 164, such that the aforementioned third alarm condition is suppressed by microprocessor 162 when the manifold pressure sensor output 192a of sensor 192 is indicative of a relatively low manifold pressure, for example, a manifold pressure below a given set point pressure of the engine 10. This is desirable in order to suppress false alarms because pump input-output difference pressure is typically low at low power or idle conditions of the engine 10.
The monitoring system 150 also has a coolant presence detector 158, such as a optical sensor, arranged and positioned inside the cooling system for providing a sensor output signal 158a indicative of an absence of coolant liquid in contact with coolant presence detector 158. Sensor output signal 158a is processed by microprocessor 162 under control of corresponding firmware 164 of logic circuits 160, to derive a fourth alarm condition signal 172 For example, the coolant presence detector 158 can be mounted inside coolant pump 20 at a location which is normally filled with liquid coolant. Sufficient overheating of the liquid coolant typically results in boiling of the liquid coolant into steam or gas, creating bubbles or voids within the cooling system, and possibly causing cavitation within coolant pump 20. These voids or bubbles displace liquid coolant and are detected by sensor 158.
The engine cooling monitoring system 150 preferably also has one or more leak detection sensors 190 positioned externally to the coolant circuit for detecting a fifth alarm condition indicative of steam or liquid escaping at seals, joints, couplings or other locations potentially subject to failure. A leak detection sensor 190, such as a capacitive sensor, is positioned near a location which is to be monitored for steam or liquid leakage. For example, one such sensor 190 may be positioned in close proximity and underneath a seal PS of the pressure pump 20 as suggested in
The several alarm condition outputs 166–174 are connected for driving an indicator 180 located for alerting an operator of engine 10 to the alarm condition. The indicator 180 is not limited to any particular indicator type or configuration. The indicator 180 is provided so as to inform an operator of engine 10 of the alarm conditions derived by logic circuits 160. For example, a visual indicator 180 for an aircraft engine may be installed in a control panel visible to a pilot in the aircraft cockpit. In one form of the invention, indicator 180 may take the form of a single light which is flashed at different rates to signal different alarm conditions. Alternatively, different lights may be provided for signaling different alarm conditions.
The external leakage sensor or sensors 190 along with suitable leakage sensor output signal processing logic circuits 160, such as microprocessor 162 and appropriate firmware instructions 164, for driving a coolant leakage alarm indicator 180e may be installed as a standalone coolant leakage monitoring system, apart from the components supporting the first, second, third and fourth alarm conditions described previously.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been described for purposes of clarity and explanation, it must be understood that many changes, substitutions and modifications to the described embodiments will be apparent to those having only ordinary skill in the art without thereby departing from the scope of this invention as defined by the following claims.
This is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 10/386,948 filed Mar. 11, 2003 now abandoned, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/165,271 filed Jun. 10, 2002 which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/693,757 filed Oct. 19, 2000 now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,408,803.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4768484 | Scarselletta | Sep 1988 | A |
5708412 | Proulx | Jan 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050155561 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10165271 | Jun 2002 | US |
Child | 10386948 | US | |
Parent | 09693757 | Oct 2000 | US |
Child | 10165271 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10386948 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 11034129 | US |