Bagarre wrote:BirdyinBOI wrote:I am yet to see actual dyno numbers comparing engines but changing compression ratio alone does little to nothing to increase power output at a given RPM.
C-85
HP: 85 @ 2,575
Bore: 4.0625
Stroke: 3.625
Compression: 6.3:1
C-125
HP: 125 @ 2,550
Bore: 4.0625
Stroke: 3.625
Compression: 6.3:1
C-145/O-300
HP: 145 @ 2,700
Bore: 4.0625
Stroke: 3.875
Compression: 7.0:1
I'd rely on actual dyno numbers, or the physics behind it and not depend on Continentals rating as even the numbers you show above demonstrate more HP from compression/stroke.
Here is some of the math.
HP = RPM x tq /5252
The C-125 at 2550 is 257.5 ft/lbs. (125 = 2550 x 257.5 / 5252) so If you can maintain that up to 2700 rpm you get 132.4HP (132.4 = 2700 x 257.5 / 5252)
The C-145 at 2700 is 282.1 ft/lbs (145 = 2550 x 282.1 / 5252) so the C-145 at 2550 would be 137HP (137 = 2550 x 282.1 / 5252 )
Horsepower is a function of work over time, that's why RPM is important. You can make 200HP at 1000rpm with 1050 ft/lbs of torque or 200HP at 10000rpm with 105 ft/lbs. In the latter case you do 1/10th of the work, 10x faster.
Since our airplanes need 2500-2700 rpm, you can get HP by more torque or more rpm (which requires a gearbox). Torque comes from cylinder pressures leveraged by the crankshaft stroke. More compression = more cylinder pressures because there is more volume of air and because to get more compression you also usually end up with more stroke.
Many calculators on the internet show around an 5-8% increase going from 7:1 to 9:1. Other places say 3% per compression point.
If you want the real math, it's here:
http://web.mit.edu/16.unified/www/SPRIN ... ode25.htmlNotice figure 3.11, going from 7:1 to 9:1 brings up the efficiency a little bit.
Anyway, at the end of the day, I could believe getting into the 155-158HP range with 9:1 pistons, but 200HP? No, that's a WAG, and completely outside of the laws of physics.
Is it worth it? Well, that's 25ftlbs more torque and according to more back of the napkin math, that would buy you around 60 static RPM.
If you are looking for takoff and climb performance, I would guess the 8042 prop performs way better than the extra HP, and it's legal too.
Another option is STOL kit, or light weight panel. I know someone with a stock c-145 that has his 170 down to 1230lbs on 29" bushwheels. It works just fine.