I’ve been following a long time also was always hopeful I’m glad they finally certified the engine just wish they could give us some answers.
Recent article in one of the aviation channels (kit plane magazine I recall) where they took a tour of Delta Hawk, stated they do not have manufacture go ahead yet. Correct me if I am wrong. The design is approved as we all know. I do not think they have STC for any existing planes but they are flying in Cirrus and Velocity test beds. From the article the Delta hawk facility was nice, with test equip (dyno), engineering offices, administration you would expect from a company that makes aircraft engines.
Delta Hawk as I read outsources most of the engine and assembles them there in Wisconsin, so their manufacturing floor is pretty sparse at this time. They are not mass producing engines at this time as I read it. The Biz model is to both outsource and grow as needed as orders come in. Makes good Biz sense to me. The other thing I gather from talking to them at OSH, they have their heart set on being a defacto engine of a certified aircraft, be it a Cirrus, Dimond, Cessna, Piper. That makes sense. They need orders. Also STC for existing airframes would be great. Then the experimental market. It is business so the idea is sell them for a profit. I don't think they shun the experimental market, but do they want to get into the FWF kit manufacturing Biz for all the different kits? They will if they can make money. However If I was them I would want a Standard Category aircraft company to do installation and get it certified. I also am sure people getting STC's to retrofit into existing fleet would be something they want others to do. Who knows they may go down that road.
Aviation is a small (tiny) market compared to automotive. I heard a statistic that in one year world wide car production more engines are made than the entire history of aviation by many factors. One year vs 100 years and still aircraft engines are a tiny faction. Millions of engines verses thousand(s). So let that sink in. Aviation makes up for it by charging more. Aircraft engines are hand made low production, with a lot of regulatory QC. OK. Also experimental is a slice of the whole small pie of aviation engines. It makes sense they want to go with deep pockets. $110,000 is a lot for kit plane builder, when a builder can go to Wentworth and buy a used engine, tear it down, inspect, refresh and go for a fraction of the bucks.
Also LSA and rise of the 100-130 hp class of aircraft which use tiny high revving water/oil cooled Rotax mostly has put a damper on higher HP airplanes and higher 180HP engines. I think Rotax has reached the limit with their current platform, the 915iS, 135HP, but that is $45k I recall. There is a 916iS that is 160hp takeoff but 137hp continuous. That is $50k? So Delta Hawk is not too far off or out of line. However a Lyc IO360 180hp is best bang for buck new or used IMHO.
Not to mention alternative engines, which is no real threat to Lycoming, Continental or Delta Hawk for that matter. Alternative engines cut into Rotax market, sub 135 hp. Now with Mosaic LSA's can be bigger heavier aircraft with larger engines, the Lyc and TCM is viable for "LSA", Delta Hawk as well. The limit of LSA will be stall speed of the airframe not as much gross weight. The only niche market that is viable are the Honda, Suzuki, Mitsubishi engine converters, selling used engines with their kits. I am bias and don't think auto conversions are as good as dedicated aircraft engines. That is my opinion, not a bash just not my cup of tea. Aircraft business is kind of tough. These car engine converters is a tiny slice of a tiny slice. To get into aviation business and end up with "one million dollars" (Austin powers) in the bank, you have to start with three million... ha ha.
Bottom line rooting for Delta Hawk. Getting approval is great now they need to make and sell them, a bunch of them. Made in USA, love it. I think it will be a great engine and look forward to seeing them fly and getting some performance numbers.