wheaters
Elio Addict
Do they have the Rolls Royce engines or Pratt and Whitney. Having worked on the Bell 212, I prefer P&W.
P&W 207C
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You can register using your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account, just click here.Do they have the Rolls Royce engines or Pratt and Whitney. Having worked on the Bell 212, I prefer P&W.
I'm curious about testing the production engines!?! I know nothing about the process, but everyone seems on the edge of their seat for the results of the prototype engine. I know, I'm one of those people too! However, every single part of the prototype engine is a "hand made" piece & was hand assembled. This is the engine being tested...
The actual production engine is going to be mass produced parts, put together by machine.
So, my question is, when they roll that first production engine off the line, will they dyno test that engine as well, or just assume it's gonna work as good as the prototype because the computer said it would?
Maybe this is a nill issue, due to factors that I'm not aware of, but it seems logical to me that a hand-crafted, hand built prototype engine & a mass produced, machine built engine may not be EXACTLY, 100% identical & therefore, a production engine should also be dyno tested. If this is the case, do we wait another 6 months while they dyno the production engine? Or is dyno testing a production engine not necessary? If not, what would be the reasoning for not testing a production engine?
Ignorant & Curious!
No flame here. However, think about making 10 of an engine that during testing shows a flaw of some kind. Then instead of fixing or correcting 1 engine they have to do 10. This is a prototype engine and therefore hand built. That would be pretty pricey no matter how you look at it. If they test this engine and make all the corrections on it then when they build the engines that will actually go in an Elio there is less likelyhood of there being problems. I don't know if I read this somewhere or it is my own interpretation, however, it makes sense to me to do it this way. :-) ZIs there an explanation why only one engine has been built?
It would seem to me, that the future of EM rests heavily on the success of the engine's performance, i.e. speed and mileage
I can't imagine it would cost 10x the amount of one to build the 10, EM is too smart to limit it to one?, they've had this one running from middle of November, and to find out even now a slight flaw, will easily set back the process 6 weeks. However, if it's a matter of cost, then .........
Perhaps I'm not the first to raise this, but haven't found it in a search.
No need to flame, I'm in it to see it thru.
Not so much insight as it is speculation. We will get there. I know the waiting is hard but we will get there. :-) Zjust one small machine casting flaw, a damage from a test, the need to possibly change out parts would allow for the quick interchange, and modifications as the testing progressed. There cannot be ANY type of defect. An error on one unit might make it easier to changed out. To put the future success on one new, NOT off the shelf unit, seems to be risky. But that's just me sitting here, and hopefully all will go as planned. thanks for your insight,
Is there an explanation why only one engine has been built?
It would seem to me, that the future of EM rests heavily on the success of the engine's performance, i.e. speed and mileage
I can't imagine it would cost 10x the amount of one to build the 10, EM is too smart to limit it to one?, they've had this one running from middle of November, and to find out even now a slight flaw, will easily set back the process 6 weeks. However, if it's a matter of cost, then .........
Perhaps I'm not the first to raise this, but haven't found it in a search.
No need to flame, I'm in it to see it thru.
Let's hope!!!!!!!!Well, in a couple of months we should get some updates with photos of the early development phase. My guess.