ASP Engines : anyone using?

Started by amir, May 26, 2009, 04:51:52 PM

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amir

Amir Shabeeh Ahmed
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chanvivek

I know a few people using ASP and have heard very good reviews.  ASPs are OS clones and you can interchange parts between similar sized engines.  Atleast thats what I heard.  I even know of an ASP engine running with OS parts!!

- Chan

Pikle6

i know nothing about glow gas or nitro (hopefully will in future).
just trying to help. googled on ASP and found something that might be useful.
http://www.justengines.unseen.org/acatalog-cgi/ss000001.pl?page=search&PR=-1&TB=A&SS=ASP&ACTION=quick+search
sorry if that doesnot help as am into electric (less noise less pollution ;D ;D ;D) (and of course less global warming  ;D ;D) (glow gas or nitro lovers please take it lightly  8-) 8-) 8-) 8-))
E.V.Subramanian
Yak55|EasyFly Glider 1.9m|Skyfun|Easystar II|Quad Talon V2|Mini Saturn

Mike

I have an ASP 46 and runs very well, they are indentical to the SC engines of which I have a 15 year old SC61 and SC40 both of which I retired after 11 years. They are available from Just Engines in UK who provide a very good service, after I ploughed my spitfire into a tarmac runway, I sent the engine (what was left of it) back to them and they fixed it in a very short time.. still running.  Personally I wouldn't even look at anything else!!


anwar

I never owned one, but had the chance to work on them a few times at the field.  I felt they are little harder to tune (ie, getting the low and high speed needles correctly set) as compared to OS. 

Once set, they are very smooth.
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falcon

i am using ASP engines but not satisfied with RPM  always problem

might be i received this the only one hard difficult piece by chance
but in this price i would like to try once again

CrazyPilot

Quote from: Pikle6 on May 26, 2009, 06:12:08 PM
sorry if that doesnot help as am into electric (less noise less pollution ;D ;D ;D) (and of course less global warming  ;D ;D) (glow gas or nitro lovers please take it lightly  8-) 8-) 8-) 8-))

Dear pikle, Why take lightly? Everyone who pollutes this planet is responsible. there should be a complete ban on glow/gas engine or atleast some emission control.  we should not allow anymore pollution just because its cheaper.
When you fly electric, fly clean, fly quiet, and fly safe!

divay99

Crazypilot...

What a thought.. .Simply "WoW" ;)
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flyingboxcar

Yes similarly all the factories manufactring batteries,motors and ESC should be shut, complete ban on felling of Balsa trees, ban on all factories producing any kind of foam as they are all non biodegradable. That would make sure there is no pollution 
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flyingboxcar

#9
Quote from: chanvivek on May 26, 2009, 05:37:16 PM
I know a few people using ASP and have heard very good reviews.  ASPs are OS clones and you can interchange parts between similar sized engines.  Atleast thats what I heard.  I even know of an ASP engine running with OS parts!!
- Chan


Yes, actually I have experience of the reverse. I have an OS 46 FX running on ASP parts as OS stopped supporting these engines. There should be no reason why exactly the reverse should not be possible
SC, Magnum, ASP are all manufactured at the same factory and ASP's main business is manufacturing full size Turbines.
I have used ASP 2T (mixed reaction), and 4T. The engines are exact copy of older OS engines and hence when compared to newer OS engines are less powerful. But then if you are looking for power, OS is not the leader anyway.
The ASP's are easy to tune run satisfactorily, the only area where these engines suffer is probably the QC.

 
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saurabhhsrivastavaa

#10
I have been using ASP61 2 Stroke (remote needle) on my SPAD for the last 1 year. NO problems at all. Initial tuning is a bit harder (as rightly quoted by Anwar) but once set, they perform really well.

I was using it on my Extra 330L (CmPro) initially but had problems heating up the engine. For some reasons, the engine did not like the cowl and used to die quite often during flights (airflow through the cowl was quite reasonable.) But once I put it on my SPAD, it has been behaving really well. It is open now. No cowl. APC 13*4 prop. No deadsticks AT ALL...  ;D
Cheers !!!
Saurabh
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praveen

initial tunning is only problem! mine is ASP28 from RCD running on trainer ,after year (60 flights) still flying ! starts on single flip
To increase thrust you need more  money! But to reduce weight you  need nothing!

vinay

Quote from: praveen on September 24, 2010, 06:30:01 PM
initial tunning is only problem! mine is ASP28 from RCD running on trainer ,after year (60 flights) still flying ! starts on single flip

Every one is not an Aeroplane mechanic  >:D

Just kidding.  ;)

praveen

#13
 ha ha ha
;D ;D ;D
vinay but i have worked on only one piston engined aircraft that too during training,
dh104
we used to call "daadi maa"
To increase thrust you need more  money! But to reduce weight you  need nothing!

vinay


majraj

I was initially skeptical of ASP. But my ASP 91 on my YAK 54 changed my view 180deg. Yes slightly tricky on initial tuning, but once that is in place I find it to perform better them OS. Superb power, no more engine cuts. I was recommended not to use nitro on these but I am using 5% nitro & it's firing really well. Just received my ASP 108 & ASP 52, can't wait to fier them. Excellent buy for the price. I would rate it 4/5.

flyingboxcar

#16
Saurabh,
It is not the cowl or the engine which was creating problem. You need to ensure that air actually flows past all around the engine.
Most of the time what is noticed is that people cut up the front and rear and assume the engine would receive sufficient cooling, you need to force the air through the desired route and baffling comes in real useful in cowled engine.
If you have ever come across CL speed models you would immediately realise what I am saying. You would not beleive if you see the inlet and outlet for air, and these engines run at WOT all the time and pump out all the power.

For example see here : Google Link
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flyingboxcar

#17
Or see these pictures, you can see how tightly the engine is cowled and the size of air inlet and exit. Now comapre this to the usual size of openings you see on an average RC airplane  :giggle:
 
If you are really into scale you should be here. www.rcscalebuilder.com

saurabhhsrivastavaa

Hi.
Thanks for the pic and the link.

I do agree that you need to push the air into the cowl and to the right spots. Maybe that was the problem...
but now since the engine is out and performing well, i guess I am OK.

however going forward, will take care of it.

Thanks for your time and appreciate your inputs.
Cheers !!!
Saurabh
+91 7977382130

anwar

#19
We (Mike, myself, and another old timer aeromodeller hailing from Delhi named Mr Shrivatsava) had a heck of a time today with an old 40 size ASP engine owned by Mr.Shrivastava. 

Here are the symptoms / obeservations :

1.  Basically, if we kept the engine in idle, the engine would gradually run slower and slower and quit.

2.  If we gradually increased the throttle and kept it above about 25%, it would not die at all.  If we applied throttle suddenly after a few seconds in idle, the engine would quit immediately.

3.  The transition from low to high was a bit hesitant. 

4.  The best performance on the high needle was around 0.8 turns (NOTE... less than 1 turn !).

5.  It had a remote needle, and some very small bubbles were forming in the fuel tube connecting the remote needle to the carb.  Mike, who hated remote needles like anything ;) , wanted to remove it from the equation.  But he left before our investigation was complete, and we detected a small crack in that piece of fuel tube.  That took care of the bubbles, but did not fix the "quitting on idle or sudden throttle" issue.

6.  No amount of "sensible" (you will know why I used this word... in a minute) tuning would fix the idle.

7.  Fuel was good, glow plug was new.

8.  Finally, we opened up the carb and cleaned it.  While at it, we decided to make Mike happy, so we moved the high needle from the remote to the carb itself.  After all of this, still the idle problem persisted.

9.  Finally, I decided to try something unsensible, we closed the low needle all the way, and started the engine.  The reason for this is that making it rich was not helping (not hurting much either), so I went the other way, leaning it out bit by bit.  To our surprise, the idle was perfect, the transitions were great, and the backplate was barely warm to touch even after running for couple of minutes in idle like this ! 

So at the low needle fully closed, and high needle at 0.75 turns open, we had what looked like a well tuned engine.  We flew couple of sorties like that before calling it a day. 

My question is, can anyone explain why the idle needed had to be closed (or just about closed) for the idle to be smooth ? 

And is it normal for ASP engines to have the main/high needle only 0.75 turns open for best performance (as compared to OS engines where the sweetspot is between 1 and 1.5 turns) ?
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saikat

was the fuel - no nitro ? and castor oil ?

anwar

10% nitro, I believe it was Byron brand.
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anwar

The other question this brings up is what should one's understanding be when you quickly pump throttle and the engine quits.  I remember Sushil bhai commenting earlier that it is an indication of being too lean, and in that case, it was proved true.  In this case, it turned out that it was an issue with the needle setting being too rich.  Too much fuel drowns out the plug, and this is compounded if the plug is already weak.

My understanding is that you have to closely watch for HOW it dies. If it throws out a lot of fuel and then dies, it is too rich, if not it is too lean.  Looking for comments on this too...
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sushil_anand

Quote from: anwar on November 17, 2010, 08:02:11 PM

My understanding is that you have to closely watch for HOW it dies. If it throws out a lot of fuel and then dies, it is too rich, if not it is too lean.  Looking for comments on this too...

Exactly! If it dies immediately on opening the throttle the idle setting is probably too lean. If rich, it will splutter and then die.

Do note that the idle settings - in most engines - are fairly sensitive. Try about 1/8th turn at a time.
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anwar

Yes, we went very very slow on the small needle, we always do 10 to 15 degrees at a time. 

And regarding the splutter, it did not ! Death was near instant, we could barely detect a huge gush of fuel/fumes, yet it was later diagnosed to be too rich. This is one reason why we tried going both ways, as it had become difficult to detect the required changes just by observing symptoms alone.



       
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