manolis

Members
  • Content

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never
  • Feedback

    0%

Community Reputation

0 Neutral
  1. Hello Alexg3265. We are building a full size PatATi Opposed Piston Portable Flyer (800cc). If you need the drawings e-mail me. As I wrote in the first post, the PatATi Portable Flyer is a: perfectly "vibration free" and "reaction free" structure. Let me further explain these terms. The Wankel engine can be, "inertially", a perfectly balanced engine, however it cannot bet a "perfectly vibration free" engine / structure. Consider the case wherein your paraglider (or your ultralight) is having a Wankel rotary engine driving a propeller. At each combustion / expansion the propeller accelerates and the rest structure, including your body, inevitably receives a reaction torque pulse. Think what happens at a sudden opening or closing of the throttle Consider now that your paraglider (or your ultralight) is having a PatATi Opposed Piston engine driving two counter-rotating symmetrical propellers. As happens with the Wankel rotary, the PatATi OP is, “inertially”, a perfectly balanced engine. But it is also a "perfectly vibration free" structure. During a combustion/expansion, each piston, through the respective connecting rod and crankshaft, accelerates its own propeller. The casing receives a "reaction" torque in order to accelerate the one propeller and an equal and opposite reaction torque in order to accelerate the other propeller. The two reaction torques cancel each other inside the casing of the engine. This way the basis of the engine, i.e. the rider / pilot / frame, remains perfectly rid of inertia and of combustion vibrations (common combustion chamber, same instant pressure acting on both piston crowns, zero phase difference between the two crankshaft). The sudden opening or closing of the throttle cannot de-stabilize the structure any longer. Consider now the PatATi Opposed Piston Portable Flyer. With the two propellers (and flywheels) rotating at opposite directions (like two symmetrical gyroscopes), the structure has, according the theory and the experiments: “no gyroscopic stabilization (acts just as if the gyroscopes were not spinning, ie., the gyroscopes fall over exactly as when they are not spinning - zero net angular momentum)” (quote from Physics Forums at http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=173215 ) So, either the two big propellers (1m diameter each) rotate at 5,000rpm, or at 2,000rpm, or they are slow revving or they are completely stopped, the pilot / rider “sees” the same difficulty in order to change the direction of the Portable Flyer (and, so, the direction of the thrust force). And this is quite important for a stable flight. Thanks Manolis Pattakos
  2. Hello. You may like to think (or dream) about this application: [Url]http://www.pattakon.com/PatAT/PatATi_OP_props.gif[/URL] [Url]http://www.pattakon.com/PatAT/PatATi_half_OP.gif[/URL] It is an Opposed-Piston PatATi Portable Flyer having 80mm bore, 80+80=160mm stroke, 800cc, 540mm crankshaft axis to crankshaft axis distance (two directly-driven counter-rotating propellers, 1m diameter each), perfectly "vibration free" and "reaction free" structure, total weight less than 15Kp (33lb). The second GIF is the one half of the Opposed Piston PatATi engine and shows the "internals". The narrowing at the center of the cylinder of the OP PatATi engine enables a compact combustion chamber without spoiling the - loop - scavenging. The spark plugs are located more centrally. The narrowing causes the required squeeze during the combustion. Without phase difference between the two crankshafts (yet, with asymmetric transfer and intake) and with the same instant pressure acting on the two piston crowns (common combustion chamber), the synchronizing mechanism (not shown) between the two crankshafts runs unloaded, so it can be lightweight and reliable, causing minimum power loss. The two counter-rotating propellers act as the flywheels of the engine. With the two oppositely moving pistons counterbalancing each other, the balance webs on the crankshafts have to balance only the mass of the crankpin and of the rotating part of the mass of the connecting rods (lightweight and compact crankshafts). At 5,000rpm the speed of the blade tip of the 1m diameter propellers is 260m/sec. With 0.5Kg reciprocating mass per piston (it includes the mass of the piston, of the wrist pin and of the "reciprocating part - typically 1/3 - of the connecting rod) the resulting maximum inertia force is 700Kp at the TDC (at the BDC the inertia force drops to 400Kp; con-rod to stroke ratio: 2). In comparison, with only 20 bar pressure inside the cylinder (20 bar is the BMEP - brake mean effective pressure - in the typical marine two-stroke supercharged engine), the resulting pressure force on each piston is 1,000Kp. http://www.pattakon.com/PatAT/PatATi_OP_flyer.gif[/URL] Application: Imagine a pilot / rider wearing a wingsuit and having secured on his shoulders this Portable Flyer, flying only 2m above the sea (for safety) from island to island. The pilot / rider can take off vertically, like a helicopter, and then he can progressively turn to horizontal fly, like an airplane, to cover the distance quickly and fuel efficiently (fast and cheap). At landing he returns to "helicopter" mode to land vertically. For more about the PatATi Aymmetric Transfer and Intake: [url]http://www.pattakon.com/pattakonPatAT.htm Thoughts? Thanks Manolis Pattakos