Stephan Wilkinson wrote:
I have seen references to the Daimler-Benz 605 engine as used in the Bf-109G being "timed out" at 150 hours of running. Does this mean it has reached an official TBO? Or that it needs comprehensive inspection and probably maintenance? Or that 150 hours is a generally accepted number for the length of time a DB-605 can be trusted to run without failure?
In the same vein, Allison V-1710s seem to have a reputation for "running forever"--well, 1,500 hours--without needing overhaul. Is this true?
(I'm writing about the "new" Erickson Collection Bf-109G-10 replica with an upright Allison engine and want to see if I can get some reliable numbers on the durability of a V-1710 versus a DBF-605.)
Stephan, 5 years ago I asked a question about the TBO of DB 601 / 605 in a German forum. The main engine expert gave the following answer:
Teilüberholung (part overhaul) : 100 hours,
Grundüberholung (main overhaul) : 200 hours,
maximum lifetime span: 2 main overhauls + 200 hours,
so a maximum time of 600 hours
all of the above by original DB manuals.
But he wrote additionally, today, IF key components are within tolerances, and you use spare parts then you might use the main parts even longer (of course a lots of parts will need to be replaced by that runtime.
IIRC the manual states, that the 100 hours overhaul time can be extended for a maximum of 50 hours if: operational reasons dictate so, if the engine and its components are thoroughly inspected and no problems occur, all parameters are in their limitations. But: this does NOT extend the 200 hours limit as well. (I believe it would make no sense in todays operational mode to extend the 100 hours limit).
Michael
P.S. I do not know what amount of work / change of parts either the 100 or the 200 hrs overhaul need.