Thumbs up.👍

On Mon, Jul 25, 2022 at 3:56 PM Dr. Feng Hsu via KRnet <krnet@list.krnet.org>
wrote:

> Yes Mr. Colin, thank you for sharing your experience from your KR2
> adventure around the world, and your stores are nothing short of fantastic,
> amazing and miraculous!
>
> I truly enjoyed my reading of your interesting and exciting long stories,
> as you are a hack of an excellent writer as well! While enjoying your
> stories, especially about your unexpected and risky encounters in Russia, I
> kept saying to myself, it's a miracle this guy are still with us today and
> I can't believe he had managed to survive all that dangerous encounters and
> allowed us to read what really had happened during your incredible journey
> around the planet!
>
> You surely took lots of risk in your global adventure, and I am amazed to
> see you are still alive today because you have violated nearly every
> principle about safety and risk management in your exploration of the world
> on a tiny little homebuilt KR2 flying boat which is basically made of
> nothing expensive but a bunch of wood sticks & foam panels...!
>
> I can see you are such a lucky guy who could have dead of spark induced
> fuel explosion when you tried to messing with the wire connectors that
> surrounded by a bunch of your moving fuel bladders, and you could have dead
> of an engine detonation in middle air if the ave gas you bought from a
> Russian pilot was fake or counterfeited. And most likely, you could have
> dead of being shooting down from the air by both of the Russian & Chinese
> border defense near the Russia-China border for violation of their security
> protocols.....!!
>
> I for one, solute you for what you have done and achieved single handedly
> for the glorious reputation of the KR2 community around the globe!
> Honestly, I remember one of the key reasons behind my decision to get into
> the KR2 arena a couple of years ago, instead of buying a Pulsar was due to
> my watching of a news on YouTube about your adventure with your homebuilt
> KR2....
>
> Thanks again for sharing!
>
> Dr. Hsu
>
> On Sat, Jul 23, 2022, 12:24 AM colin hales via KRnet <krnet@list.krnet.org>
> wrote:
>
>> In the spirit of safety indeed…
>>
>>
>> I apologise for not responding sooner, been away on business. And sorry
>> for the length of this message, but I did try to cover all questions asked
>> in-depth and thoroughly.
>>
>>
>>
>> The two KR2 aircraft I built were a standard KR2 design. Originally they
>> had VW1834 engines as per the original design, but then Jabiru engines were
>> acquired due to their increased power and 60 pound weight saving. Since
>> this engine was so much lighter than the VW 1834, this would require
>> extensive calculations to see how far we needed to extend the engine frame.
>> We needed to calculate the centre of mass of the VW engine and compare it
>> with the Jabiru engine. Eventually, the conclusion was that the centre of
>> mass of the jabiru needed to be 10 inches further forward than the VW to
>> establish the most forward C of G position desirable. My empty C of G
>> position is 19.3 inches aft of the firewall datum or 7.3 inches aft of the
>> leading edge. Approximately 15% of the cord and 1 inch in front of the fwd
>> C of G limit... Each aircraft in the UK has to have its own individual
>> weight and balance calculation, so that covers any variations in build
>> design.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> While changing to the Jabiru engine, there was another young builder Phil
>> Geohegan working on his Jabiru powered KR2. For his university studies in
>> Aerodynamics, his thesis involved the study of modification of the KR2
>> design by placing an additional 12 inch bay forward of the wings for his
>> Jabiru powered aircraft. His aircraft weighed 485 lb if I remember right?
>> Wind tunnel testing was carried out with the longer nose modification and
>> the findings were that it made little to no effect on stability between the
>> standard aircraft. I only wish I could find the pictures of his 1/5th
>> scale model he built in black carbon, in the wind tunnel.
>>
>>
>>
>> We built our wings from Blue Styrofoam, for lightness, possibly reducing
>> the empty weight by 50lb overall due to the closed cell nature of this
>> foam. But unfortunately, fuel obviously melts this type of foam, so we
>> could not build wing tanks, as any leaks would see the wings turn into a
>> molten blob. So we have aluminium tanks above our feet in the cockpit. This
>> also greatly reduces the complexity and weight as there is no need for fuel
>> pumps or electrics or transfer pipes. My main tank contains 24 US gallons
>> 90 litres. The engine burns about 18 litres an hour or 4.75 US gallons an
>> hour.
>>
>>
>>
>> To get across the Atlantic, I needed a reserve tank and built one to sit
>> on the passenger seat. It held 45 litres 12 US gallons. For the flights
>> through Russia, the longest flight would be 1,100NM. So I acquired four 20
>> litre rubber fuel bladders, another 80 litres 21 US gallons, so I departed
>> Nome with 215 litres or 51 US Gallons on board which weighed about 350
>> pounds
>>
>>
>>
>> Now there are several problems with using flexible fuel bladders and
>> placing them in different positions in the aircraft. I placed three in the
>> passenger footwell and the fourth on top of the additional passenger seat
>> fuel tank. Ie, as far forward as possible. But since the bladder changes
>> shape when you shove it into various places, it is impossible to calculate
>> the centre of its mass to enable accurate C of G calculations.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> We know the pilot and passenger seat loading distance from the datum and
>> the fuel tank and the parcel shelf distances. These can easily be
>> physically measured. But measuring the C of G position of four additional
>> fuel bladders, placed in wherever I could fit them, to complete an accurate
>> C of G calculation would be impossible. Hence, knowing how heavy my
>> tailplane felt with a known passenger sitting in the passenger seat and the
>> aircraft fuelled normally with just light items on the parcel shelf was
>> very helpful. Knowing this fuel-laden configuration was within C of G
>> limits from previous experience and calculations meant I could do a
>> comparison now, with the fuel replacing the weight of a passenger. I could
>> tell that the weight on my tailwheel felt similar, but a little more. But
>> then the aircraft was heavier in general anyway. So I concluded the C of G
>> was beyond the 6 inch range where I would normally fly the aircraft, but
>> still with the build manuals 8 inch C of G range.
>>
>>
>>
>> We carried out extensive flight testing on many KR2’s in the UK and they
>> all seemed comparable. The aircraft have built-in stability up to 6 inches
>> of the standard 8 inch range. For my aircraft, the test pilot completed the
>> flight envelope by adding and moving around known weights and we took the C
>> of G to the 8 inch aft limit. The test pilot’s findings were that, Yes it
>> was controllable at 8 inches, but there was no longer any stability built
>> in. For the sake of clarity of stability. A simple test, is carried out.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Pull back on the stick to raise the nose and then let go. If the nose
>> drops as the speed decreases, but then raises itself again when the speed
>> increases again, until the oscillation fades away and stable level flight
>> is returned, without need of any other input, then the aircraft has
>> stability built in. If you pull back on the stick and let go and the
>> aircraft keeps climbing until it stalls, then at that point the aircraft
>> can be said to be neutrally stable. At the 8 inch aft limit, the test pilot
>> reported that however well you trimmed the aircraft, when you let go of the
>> stick the aircraft would divert off in any direction almost immediately and
>> would not recover back to level flight and now this is my experience
>> also... For these reasons, in the UK we limit the C of G range to just 6
>> inches, removing the rear two inches of the original design parameters.
>>
>>
>>
>> So, when departing Nome, the aircraft weighed approximately 1080 lb and
>> the C of G - I would estimate, because with the rubber fuel bladders and no
>> scales available I could only estimate by lifting the tail, I would say
>> that it was beyond the normal 6 in range limit and in the divergent range,
>> but still within the 8 inch range that the original design parameters
>> permit. The aircraft was not particularly twitchy, but I could not trim the
>> aircraft and let go, As soon as I let go, any turbulence would have the
>> aircraft heading off on its own.
>>
>>
>>
>> Unlike passengers, at the end of these long flights, with all the fuel
>> pumped into the main tank and then burnt off, the aircraft was configured
>> as if being flown no longer with a passenger, with nothing but empty fuel
>> bladders and extra range tanks taking up room on the passenger's seat, but
>> adding no weight. The C of G change of the main tank being full to empty
>> was 1 inch further forward when full. So this had little to no effect on
>> stability.
>>
>>
>>
>> So
>>
>> Empty C of G 15 % MAC
>>
>> No fuel and one pilot. 27% MAC
>>
>> Full fuel and one pilot 21% MAC
>>
>> No Fuel Two 180 lb passengers 35% MAC
>>
>>
>>
>> As mentioned, each aircraft has its own individual weight and balance
>> sheet. Phil Geohegan carried out wind tunnel tests on the addition of 12
>> inches of airframe forward of the standard design to achieve a usable empty
>> C of G positions with the exceptionally light Jabiru engine. There was some
>> de-stabilising effect but it was found to be marginal.
>>
>> And of course, all UK KR-2 aircraft are flown within the specified 900lb
>> MAUW within the UK. What you do outside the UK is open to interpretation
>> and at the discretion of the country you are flying in. But then no one
>> ever asks...
>>
>>
>>
>> So any modification to the original design was taken into consideration
>> and indeed many of Mike Whittakers stress calculations for the KR2S, where
>> he suggested giving the aircraft higher safety factors, they are applied to
>> my KR2 aircraft as well.
>>
>>
>>
>> The other issue I noted was that carrying that much fuel was very
>> inefficient. To climb to FL120 as the Russians requested, the engine was at
>> max continuous for most of the flight and burnt a lot of the extra fuel I
>> was carrying anyway… Most annoying.
>>
>>
>> I hope you haven't aged too much while reading all this.
>>
>>
>> If anyone wants to read about the flights across America and on through
>> Russia, they can be found here.
>>
>>
>>
>> https://pilotweb.aero/news/flying-adventure-around-the-world-in-a-homebuilt-kr2-6263956/
>>
>>
>> https://pilotweb.aero/news/flying-adventure-russia-6274990/
>>
>>
>>
>> https://pilotweb.aero/news/flying-adventure-from-russia-with-permission-6274228-2/
>>
>>
>> CH
>>
>>
>>
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