Title: Lighter-Than-Air Craft
1PowerplantEngines
Conestoga Valley High School Aviation Technology
2Aircraft Engines
- Two common types
- Reciprocating (Piston)
- Turbine (Turbofan or turboprops)
- Additional Engine Types
- Ramjet
- Scrams
- Rockets
31903- 1940s Propeller Piston Era
- From 1903 (Wright bros.) until the Early 1940s,
all aircraft used the reciprocating engine
combined with a propeller as their propulsion
system. - Reciprocating engine or internal
combustion is similar to a car engine. - A propeller is essentially a type of fan which
transmits power by converting rotational motion
into thrust to propel the aircraft (move
forward).
Reciprocating engines use the energy produced by
burning a mixture of air and fuel to drive the
propeller.
4History of the IC Engine
- 1820-1900 Advancements
- First Patent 1826 American Samuel Morey
- First gas IC on a wheeled vehicle 1862 Frenchmen
Alphonse deRochas - Four-stroke engine patented 1876 German Nikolaus
Otto (Otto Cycle) - First modern gasoline engine patent 1887
German Gottlieb Daimler
Otto
Daimler
5Reciprocating Engine Parts
- Basic Parts
- Cylinder
- Pistons
- Connecting Rod
- Crankshaft
- Valves
- Spark Plugs
- Valve-operating Mechanism (CAM)
6DEFINITIONS
TDC Top Dead Center Piston at top of
stroke. BDC Bottom Dead Center Piston at Bottom
of stroke.
STROKE TDC to BDC BDC to TDC 180 degrees of
crankshaft rotation FOUR CYCLE (Stroke) 4 x 180
720 degrees to make one complete cycle.
7Reciprocating Engine Operating Principles
- Intake
- As the piston moves down from the top of the
cylinder the intake valve opens a mixture of
air/fuel is drawn into the cylinder.
- Compression
- The intake valve closes when the piston is at the
bottom of the cylinder. It moves back up the
cylinder compresses the air/fuel mixture.
8Reciprocating Engine Operating Principles
- Ignition Power
- As the compressed air/fuel mixture is compressed
the spark plug ignites the mixture which creates
an explosion and pushes the piston back down.
- Exhaust
- When the piston reaches BDC starts back up the
cylinder the exhaust and heat of the ignition is
released from the exhaust valve.
94 Stroke Reciprocating Engine
INTAKE COMPRESSION POWER EXHAUST
10Engine Cycles
11Cylinder Arrangements
- Most Common four cylinder arrangements
- In-Line
- V In-Line
- Horizontally Opposed In-Line
- Radial
12Measuring Power/Thrust
- An engines power is measured in horsepower
- One horsepower equals 33,000 foot-pounds of work
per minute - Speed is measured in Knots
- d
- 1 knot 1.15 mph
13Review Questions
- What type of engine was the most common for
planes up until the 1940s? - Who invented the 4 stoke engine which is still in
use today? - What are the 4 basic operating principles of a 4
stroke engine?
Reciprocating or Piston
Nikolaus Otto
Intake, Compression, Power, Exhaust