bdk wrote:
If the 4360 really was a much better race engine, we would see it in many, many more racers. It's only been used in what, 3 racers in Reno history - 1)Dreadnaught, 2) Super Corsair, 3) Furias. The F2G Super Corsair doesn't count since it was built that way originally, and is an original, essentially unmodified design.
No, the Super Corsair raced at Reno was a one off design and used nothing from an F2G. Not the engine, not the engine mount, not the cowling, not the oil tank, not the oil coolers, not the propeller. It was built from scratch using a stripped F4U-1 Corsair airframe. The engine was set back to within an inch of the firewall.
You will notice that I mentioned "Super Corsair" twice by accident. The first mention of "Super Corsair" was in reference to the Maloneys'/POF's purpose built air racer modified with the 4360. When I mentioned "F2G Super Corsair", I should have left the "Super" part out. That was in reference to Odegaard's Corsair. So my original statement is correct. Sorry for the confusion.
bdk wrote:
Why have virtually every single Sea Fury owner put a 3350 in their planes instead of a 4360? Lots of reasons, but primarily the extra weight is not worth the small extra horsepower and the huge frontal area is very draggy. With the 3350, owners can keep the cowling and firewall forward section (QEC) looking somewhat like a normal Sea Fury since it doesn't have to have the huge oversized cowling to accomodate the 4360. Huge oversized cowling = huge amounts of drag.
Here's the answer: Nelson Ezell sells a well engineered 3350 swap kit. Dreadnought was first, then Sanders made parts for Furias. The 3350 Sea Furies came much later. The same cowling was used for the 4360 only the side cowling was extended a couple of bays to make it longer. There is no additional frontal area from a stock Sea Fury.
While that is correct, the original reason that the 3350 was used in the first place, was strictly for economics, parts availability, good power/weight ratio and keeping the lines aesthetically similar to the original powerplant. Parts and overhauls for the Centaurus were getting harder and harder to find and more expensive. The 3350 was a logical choice back then, since they were relatively plentiful, cheap and easy to overhaul. The 4360 was not chosen for this common conversion for reasons discussed above. My mention of "oversized cowling" was primarily in reference to length. With the 4360 it has a longer nose. I wasn't aware, however, that the cowling diameter was the same for both the 4360 and 3350. That's interesting. How does the cowling on that compare to the diameter on the original Centaurus cowling? I had always thought that the diameter on the American engines were larger than the Centaurus diameter. Is this not correct?
You're right that the Ezell's produced that easy swap 3350 QEC kit. They, probably more than anybody popularized the conversion. I was told by someone close to the Ezell camp a while back that the Ezell's severely undercut the price on that conversion to directly compete with the Sanders' "perceived" over-priced conversion kit. This is what has made it so popular, along with the reasons mentioned above. I don't remember, but who did the first 3350 conversion - the Sander's or Ezell's?
bdk wrote:
Perhaps the drag issues are not desirable, but I don't think those can't be overcome with good engineering. Things like fillets, compound curves at wing/fuselage intersections, "coke bottle" designs to minimize transonic drag and efficient use of NACA airfoils, I believe could overcome those issues...<SNIP>...why can't a modern designer with the benefit of CAD, and advanced computational fluid dynamic programs, etc., design something just as fast or faster?
Well, that was supposed to be the Pond Racer. Some of the greatest minds in the disciplines you suggest were on that program. I think they would have been farther along with a Merlin powered single, but the goal was to not use any warbird parts. You just can't overcone intersection drag in any manner other than eliminating the intersections.
The Pond Racer, IMO was destined to not ever be as competitive with the Unlimiteds. Anything that flies with a car engine, just can't put out the horsepower as consistently, and without breaking to compete with the proven W.W.II technology of the Merlin's and Allison's. The Pond Racer had constant problems with applying those auto engines to airplanes. I think they could have gotten a lot further and perhaps even broken some records if they would have made an F-82 like twin with Merlin's or Allison's. IMO, the greatest and fastest potential purpose-built Unlimited ever which never realized it's potential was Tsunami. It's unfortunate it's career was cut short.
bdk wrote:
Is there anyone out there now who has perfected the 3350 or 4360 to such a degree as your Thorn's, Nixon's, etc.? If we were to see any engine builder that was able to squeeze as much extra horsepower out of those 4360's as the Merlin, they might be more popular in the Unlimiteds currently.
A lot of work over the years has gone into the Merlin and to a much much lesser extent the 3350. Virtually every 4360 racer has used an engine right out of the can (except there is one mod to keep a bearing from spinning but that doesn't add any power). I guess that nobody has needed to upgrade the 4360, it was good enough as-is.
I believe the reason for that is because: 1) a lot of the early races were won by Mustangs, 2) Bearcats were much rarer even back in the 60's and 70's when a lot of the "Merlin engine gurus" were learning their craft. Mustangs were plentiful in the years before the Sea Furies came flooding onto the market from Iraq and Germany, 3) the 4360 was still not considered a serious contender for applications for Air Racing primarily because of it's weight, the largeness of the motor with it's large frontal area, and there was no airframe large enough, except perhaps the slow airfoiled Corsair, to accommodate it's girth until the Sea Fury became more popular in Air Racing. I don't think that it was so much that people thought it was good enough as is, IMO.
bdk wrote:
I think you'll find that the key to winning isn't Merlin vs. Griffon vs. 3350 vs. 4360, but $$$$$$$ and planning with a lot of development thrown in. You just have to be prepared. These aren't formula one teams with multi million dollar budgets for wind tunnel testing and dyno testing, these are a bunch of rich guys playing once a year. The quickest way to win Reno is to buy an established winner and crew!
I agree 100%. Most technologies can be improved on, given enough funding for research and development. Money is the single, largest factor in deciding the fastest Reno racer. Whoever has the most resources can pour the time, research, and effort to really developing a winning team. That's why, IMO, I believe that Rod Lewis will, over the next 10 or so years, become one of the winningest Unlimited owners around. He has unlimited resources to pour into his airplanes and racing programs.
Great discussion, by the way!
