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Airboiy;
The best way to cool an air cooled recip engine is by getting airflow around the cylinders, and the best way to do that is with baffling. Engineers calculate how the baffling should go around the engine and determine airflow that will sufficiently cool the engine.
While your concept has merit, you have to determine a few things. Can this configuration work? Can it be assembled cost effectively? Will it be easy to produce? Will it be reliable? Will it be easy to maintain? Will it be cost effective to maintain? And finally, will it have a cost effective service life?
Its a series of sheet aluminum strategically placed around the cylinders so airflow cools the engine.The exaust tubes would be an extention of the cooling tubes. BTW, what's "baffling"? I've heard it but never understood it.
An even more common example are the older VW Beetles that had the air-cooled engines ('38-'02).
If you look under the engine, you can see some "tin" plates under the cylinders.
That's baffling, used to ensure the most airflow from the fan is always going across the cylinders.
Elvis
In the infamous words of "The Fonz", Correctamundo!.Yep - just about the same thing.
An even more common example are the older VW Beetles that had the air-cooled engines ('38-'02).
If you look under the engine, you can see some "tin" plates under the cylinders.
That's baffling, used to ensure the most airflow from the fan is always going across the cylinders.
Elvis
Of course it was...it was a solid design, born out of neccesity (or so I heard).
P.S.-Was the "stringbag" was produced by the same company that produced the Spitfire or the Hurricane?
...because when "The Flivver" was flying...
Elvis
Yep.That little Ford plane flew quite well until it spun and killed its pilot/ designer
Ford-EAA Chapt #159 Flivver
Excerpt from Air Venture Museum's Ford Flivver article said:The original Ford Flivver was short lived in that Henry Ford's personal pilot, Harry Brooks, attempted a non-stop flight from Dearborn, Michigan to Florida with the improved second model of the Flivver in February of 1928. For some unknown reason, the Flivver spun into the ocean near Melbourne, Florida and Harry Brooks was lost. Henry Ford felt so discouraged he cancelled the Ford Flivver project and the prototype Flivver 268 was placed in the Ford Museum in 1928.