So basically the oil gets churned into foam at lower altitudes?Well if you just google "churn" it is obvious what churning is. Basically severe turbulence in a fluid (milk) caused by vanes rotating in a drum to produce butter.
OkayThe "impeller" is pretty much a mirror image of the turbine. A bowl with a lot of fins and some bracing to keep them from bending (aircraft ones might be better made?).
As I grasp it, you'd need something to push the two together (or apart)?There are two ways to vary the speed of the "turbine" . . . One is have the distance between the two variable. One of them slides on it's shaft further away from the other and this allows the oil (or working medium) to slip in the empty space between the two and not transmit the full force to the turbine.
My understanding is probably just wrong here, but I'd figure more oil would mean more slippery...The other is to vary the amount of oil in the housing. No moving part but full of oil or nearly so means as the Impeller rotates the oil, moved by centrifugal force moves to the outer rim and crosses over to hit the fins on the turbine, then flows to the center and crosses back to the impeller. Impeller is turing at 24,000rpm on a DB601 and higher on later engines. Less oil in the housing means less force is transmitted.
I guess the air bubbles either reduce the oil's slickness, produce turbulence that adds resistance, or bothHowever this oil is going to get hot and if you use the engine oil and not a separate supply you are going to get lots and lots of tiny air bubbles in the oil which need to be taken out before the oil is feed back into the engine.