![]() |
who's running FADEC?
with 100LL at $4, FADEC is more cost effective (although it's still priced too high imho).
Anyone out there running FADEC who can give us hours, insights, gph stats, pros/cons, do it again? yada yada Mahlon: service experience? nits? etc? thx |
|
Ship,
Service experience with the FADEC system has been remarkably good. There have been a couple of software up dates, along the way, changing maps, but I don't know of any in service difficulties associated to the FADEC system. I have customers with as little as 50 hours on and a few with 6-7 hundred most are somewhere in between. So far no maintenance issues and no problems. George, The FADEC does add some cost to the engine but all options do. It also depends on what you compare to. It is an expensive add on but I don?t think you look at it as something that has to pay itself back. What is the free up of engine management time worth? What is the benefit of knowing that you engine is always ? tuned correctly? without you doing anything worth? What is the added financial saving of less maintenance worth? What is the possible longer engine and or cylinder life, because of better engine management during operation worth? What is the benefit of added joy to the flying experience that not having to manage the engine brings worth? To me it not just about how much more power, or fuel economy the system brings it is how much modernization it brings to the engine without having to worry about if you are managing the engine correctly. Granted some want to micro manage their engine and the FADEC will not allow that and for those FADEC isn?t a good option as it does not use any input from the pilot other then throttle position and it allows no pilot control of the engine. On the other hand, for those that don?t want to micro manage and don?t have the skills or knowledge to do that job properly, FADEC is a pretty good choice for efficiency and best engine operation. As you said looking at it out of the box, it is a 5500.00 add on to our stock TMX IO-360 mag ignition engines. Everything that you add to the engine is going to add cost. That?s just the way it is, we have to buy the parts and install them. They cost us more and they cost you more. The people who make them have to develop them and certify them and make sure they work correctly and are durable and support them. All for a very small consumer base. All that costs money and companies have to pass it on or they won?t be around to offer their products any longer. This situation is the primary reason that you don?t see a lot of innovative development of these engines. It cost a really lot of money to develop and test new products and features, if it?s done properly, and you never know how the market will react to the new product. But you do know, from the onset, that you will have to pass on a lot of developmental costs when you price your product. Lets look at some other prices through. IO-360-M1B Lycoming Engine New from Vans = 31,150.00 TMXIOF-360-M1B FADEC equipped engine from us, with all Lycoming parts and roller tappets etc= 32,000.00 and 28,500.00 with regular tappets and cam. Apples to Apples engine parts wise, mags and FI to FADEC accessory wise, and different folks, us or Lycoming building the engine.. 950.00 difference. IO-360-A1B6 Lycoming new from Vans= 35,400.00 Same engine from us with FADEC and roller tappets= 36,500.00 O-360 A1A Lycoming engine from Vans= 25,250.00 FADEC version of the same engine from us=28,600.00 with roller tappets and 26,800 with regular tappets. There is a premium, in these cases, but depending on what you compare to it may not be as much as you thought. It all comes down to if the add on is worth it for you..is carb worth more the FI? To some no and others yes. Anyway, FADEC isn?t for everyone but it is a good, proven alternative for many. Good Luck, Mahlon "The opinions and information provided in this and all of my posts are hopefully helpful to you. Please use the information provided responsibly and at you own risk." |
Yes
Quote:
|
One other reason we adopted it was the interface to our Blue Mountain EFIS 1. The EFIS 1 reads the datastream put out by the FADEC and displays the appropriate engine gauges without me having to go through and muck about with a whole array of sensors.
I've heard of engines with FADEC making more power too. Aerosance claim 5% more power for take off in some applications (not necessarily mine.) When the plane is done, I'd be happy to fly with someone to get a decent comparison, or lend the plane for a CAFE report. |
[quote=gmcjetpilot]I agree 100% except I don't find engine management difficult, so for me it would not be worth it.... Clearly a ham-handed pilot with little care in engine Ops would benefit. G[/QUOTE
for the average weekend pilot, i would agree that FADEC has zero cost-benefit at current pricing. for those of us who fly lots of x-country, it may be a different story. george, even you would have to agree that the most diligent pilot is "ham-handed" as long as there is a manual mixture control....even with top notch engine monitors it's like performing brain surgery with an axe and a flashlight. jet drivers long ago lost the ability to fiddle with "mixture control" in a turbine for good reason (fewer puddles of molten metal, etc.) the last time you could buy a car with manual engine management was in the 1920s. how often does the average person wear out pistons/valve guides/bearings in a modern car? 2000 hours = appx 100,000 miles, i.e. not even close to being worn out. heck, most cars now have 100k service intervals for major items if FADEC lives up to it's promise, we could see TBO's approaching 3000 or more hours for the venerable Lyclone designs. ...the only problem is that it takes most of us 10-20 years to put 2000 hrs on an engine, hence we don't see the immediate benefit beyond slightly better gph.....most folks will never reach TBO thus never return the total investment in FADEC at current prices. FADEC is a hard sell at $5500...but not so bad *IF* it prevents cracked cylinders or burned valves along the way to TBO at $3000 things would be MUCH more interesting ...but aerosance doesn't seem to grasp this reality yet |
Wooo
Quote:
Yes, FEDEC makes more power as been proven by the Hartzell flight test of props. It is not only the power it is the stronger, even and steady power pulses, which created the additional prop limits. The prop limits are similar but more restrictive to just putting on EI, which also makes more power, but FADEC is even more steady. The steady, even power is what sets up the prop vibrations which causes this higher prop stresses. Obviously this is a limit of metal props and not the FADEC. If I had FADEC I would use a composite prop, but prefer the metal Hartzell for lower cost and potential lower operating cost (cheaper repair and overhaul). You can use the Hartzell with FADEC with the RPM/MAP limits in mind. G Quote:
|
One other benefit I can throw in...
The FADEC system delivers fuel to each cylinder in independant amounts based on each cylinder's egt's, etc, since it runs true sequential fuel injection. This means that all the cylinders will be running at their optimum, and not just one out of four or six as the case may be. When you adjust mixture manually, you are forced to work to the worst case cylinder. All the others will be running wherever they want to run. I've got a nice MT 3 blade on it's way to me sometime soon. Should get here some time late October. |
george, you made my point :) ....weekend ham-driver engine w/hanger rot would benefit from FADEC in every way except cost/benefit.....RV flown like a freight dog would benefit in every way including cost/benefit
i agree with you on the relative benefit in cars vs light single aircraft....given steady-state operation in aircraft, manual engine management is practical if practiced properly. cost is the only issue i can see keeping FADEC out of the Lyclone game.....which i readily admit is the prime factor for most of us...but i'm more interested in the relative merits of FADEC for this discussion. Quote:
cars change oil at 50 - 100 hours, too (appx 3000 - 7500 miles) technically there's no reason why 3000 TBO is out of reach with FADEC....even though i agree 100% it's moot for 95% of GA from a practical standpoint |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 09:43 PM. |