On Saturday, I finished the new nose gear assembly.
Today,
I drilled and mounted the new Cheek Plates and Rotor Head.
Unfortunately, Gary's axiom that when you change one thing it affects 20
others is true. Moving the rotor head forward causes the pre-rotator
to hit the mast and hopefully with Jon's help, we can create a new
mounting bracket for the pre-rotator and move it to the side of the
ring away from the mast.
I also mounted the instrument pod again and connected the control rods from the rotor head back to the scissor assembly.
Finally,
I moved the main landing gear assembly 4.5 inches forward. The nose
weighed 85 lbs with me in the seat prior to the move, now it weighs 40
lbs, which will allow the nose to come up easier to balance on the mains
while spinning the rotors up to flying speed. I may stick to my
previous method of not painting new aluminum parts and leave the new
rear struts like they are pictured here.
The previous builder
installed the extra tube below the keel and I may remove it as part of
the weight reduction plan suggested by Scott Essex.
I am going to ship it to him and get it changed from a 3.11:1 ratio to 2.55:1. He states that I should set the Pitch for 6120 RPMs static once I get the box back for optimum thrust. It will likely be somewhere in the 9 to 10 degree range very similar to fellow Peach State Rotor Craft Air Command builder and pilot Gary Weaver's Rotax 582 with the same prop as mine, but, with what I believe is a 2.58:1 gear box.
Based on previous MZ 202 owners with the same set up, that will get me above 310 lbs of thrust and more is possible with a longer prop. There are folks with the 3.11 box using 70" plus props on other applications getting over 375 lbs thrust with the MZ 202. It has plenty of torque to get the job done and the gear box is apparently rock sold being used on Subaru EJ 22 and 25s with over 160 HP using adapter plates as well as big BMW conversions in Europe.
Here is a cut-away photo of the gear box from the factories website below:
Here are a couple of links to the gear box the second one shows the parts and a nice diagram of how it is set up:
http://www.compactradialengines.com/mzRZ.html (link is external)
http://www.compactradialengines.com/mzRZspecs.html (link is external)
I think that I am going to go ahead and remove the two aux fuel pods, fuel line, electric fuel pump, etc. to trim the weight back as much as possible. Perhaps I will get a larger seat tank should I decide to go on longer flights later next year, depending on how well it climbs with just 5 gallons. There are 7.5, 10 and 14 gallon versions available.