flyingfool wrote:
Can or would the CG work out with an O-235 without extending the engine mounts a bit. The original I believe was designed for no smaller engine than the O-290. I am not sure what the weight difference is between an O-235 and an O-290.
I tossed in the O-235 because it was the smallest engine Thorp himself mentioned in the early EAA articles on the design, in Part 12. He may have been thinking about the high compression version, though. Also, Thorp may have beefed up the design as time went on. His original 600 lb proposal picked up a lot of weight.
I doubt an O-235 weighs much less than an O-290, but I suspect parts are easier to come by --that's only an assumption on my part. From Lycoming's current data, the O-235 weighs 28 lb less than an O-320; however, the plane I tossed up for discussion has no electrical system, and I'm not sure I'd care to hand flip a 320. A wood prop would save a lot of weight, but I've read the metal ones flip easier, and their weight would help with the CG.
The CG is definitely a concern. Do the O-360 planes need tail ballast? I recall Thorp mentioned a CS prop would likely need ballast. Perhaps as the plans evolved, he adjusted the wing position assuming the bigger engines would be common.
For what it's worth, I'll hazard a guess that a T-18 can be built at 700 lb, maybe a smidge less. I base that on a mental tally of weights I've seen over the years for the Tailwind and the T-18. The Tailwinds are usually around 850 and the T-18s more like 900. The lightest Tailwinds are down around 650 lb, with one as low as 625 I think it was.
Has anyone weighed, as construction progressed, a T-18's airframe (on gear) before the panel and firewall-forward stuff was added?
Karl