IV HEATER

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From: by way of Marvin Kaye <marvkaye [at] olsusa.com> <N295VV [at] aol.com>
Subject: Re:IV HEATER
Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 09:22:53 -0500
To: <lancair.list [at] olsusa.com>

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From:  n295vv [at] aol.com   (n295  v v @aol.com)



Re Mike Smith's questions on the heater for the IV--I am building a heater

control valve that will not port the hot air from the turbos overboard, and I

will let the people on this site know when it is finished.



Compressing hot air and then dumping it overboard when it wasn't neeeded was

not exactly a stellar idea on Neico's part.  Additionally, the new $500 rotary

valve replacement is a piece of junk--leaks hot air like crazy into the

cockpit--it is actually leakier than the old flapper valve it replaces.



Our new heater valve we are making will be radially honed, with fit tolerances

less than 0.001", making it well capable of shutting off hot air withour

dumping it overboard.  The Neico valve measured out 0.035" sloppy between the

concentric tubes.  Additionally, the new factory assembly had the cable attach

flange welded in the wrong spot, causing a severe cable binding problem.



In all fairness, I think it was designed for the ES, where the pressure was

probably less than one would find in the IV, since the ES probably was drawing

heat from a muff.  The rotary design itself was quite inventive--the execution

just sucks.



I will let you know when they are available.



David Jones,

Pecatonica, Illinois  (RFD)

IV HEATER

From: <CKohler312 [at] aol.com>
Subject: Re: IV HEATER
Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 14:45:51 EST
To: <lancair.list [at] olsusa.com>

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To David Jones,

You will find that the Continental will not run properly (engine will surge)

if it is not allowed to bleed itself of this super charged air. Either into

the cabin or overboard.  There is a history behind the design of these sonic

nozzles. For more information call Lancair and talk with Ross Connell.

But do not arbitrarily change these nozzles.

Charlie Kohler