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Engine basics => Engine set up tips => Topic started by: Joe Fisher on May 04, 2014, 02:55:57 PM
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About a year ago I plans built 2 Ringmasters. One I put in a brand new Fox.35 the other I put in a Torpedo .19. When I try any genitive G maneuver the Fox just stops it doesn't go lean or act like it starves for fuel it is like you shut the switch off. It dose inside loops just fine but no chance for a figure 8. Also it stops just going up and down the instant I put in down elevator but it has enough momentum to start again. At first I thought it was a defect in the tank I took off the back of the tank but found nothing. I tried putting extensions on the tank vents to get some ram air pressure, didn't help. I tried running it rich to 4 cycle but it doesn't have enough power to take off. I run it as rich as it will fly the airplane. I saw a thread about turning the spray bar so the hole is just out of site. didn't help. I saw another thread about putting the prop on so it is vertical up to compression. No change. Dose any body have any other ideas I could try?
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There are all kinds of possibilities but you said a new Fox 35. They take a lot of break in. I like to put at least an hour of bench time on any engine before it goes into a plane. If I were bench running a Fox, I might consider adding up to another hour of bench time. The Fox 35 also likes all Castor, at least 25 to 28%. Failing those, try replacing the tank with a known good one and install it with the tank outlet tube pretty much in line with the NVA. Make it adjustable up and down so that you can re-position the tank if you are not getting essentially the same engine run both right side up and up side down. I would not move the tank much over 1/16" while making those adjustments.
You have probably heard about the famous, or infamous, Fox burp. That does happen with some, but no all Foxes. You can search these forums and find a lot of information about the burp but from what you wrote, I don't think that is the problem.
If these "hints" are not on target, add some additional detail about engine, fuel, tank, mounting etc etc and I am sure you will get a lot of help here.
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That's the textbook description of the Fox burp. At it's most severe the engine will stop for a heatbeat before firing and continuing on. Some Foxes do it worse than others, and sometimes just changing the engine for another one from the stash is enough to cure most of the burp. The popular fix (without retrofitting an OS engine) is to tear the engine down and put a popsicle stick in the bypass. There are a lot of other small fixes and tips that make the Fox 35 a bit easier to deal with, but that's what the search is for... Fox burp is the term you want to search under.
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Hi Joe,
Your statement of "negative G" just screams Fox Burp. There are many posts here that deal with it. The fix is simple, but takes a disassembly of the engine.
Search for Fox Burp. It is a fairly common problem of profile mounted Fox .35s.
As Michael said, tank adjustment is also a critical item. Generally, a Fox .35 on a profile needs the tank raised about 1/8th".
BIG Bear
RNMM/AMM
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Joe, I had the same thing happen with one of my Super Clowns. It had a significant burp on the 'dive' part of climb and dive, and just shut off halfway through a lazy 8, right where you apply down to start the outside loop. I tried about six different tanks, suction, muffler pressure, uniflow, etc. I changed plugs and fuel line, nothing helped. I finally cured the problem by putting an OS engine on it.
The Fox has the bypass stuffer in it, which is THE cure for the burp. Stuffer backplate and hemi head, and it ran well at one time. When I get a chance I'm going to put it back to stock configuration and see what happens.
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Joe,
First thing to check is the plug. Sometime a plug will start the engine and run but on any upset condition (i.e. an outside maneuver with a side mounted Fox) it will flame out and just quit like the switch you described. Next, the Fox 35 with the muffler needs to run a lighter load prop then open face setups. I fly mine on the old Top Flite 9x6. With this prop it launches in a fast 4 cycle, breaks at the tops and on 60' lines does 4.9 lap time. I run 5% nitro with 27% (25/75) castor/sync but SIG 5% (50/50) works to just add 2 1/2 oz of Klotz per gal.
The burp is something that on profiles can be a problem even with a good hot plug. The simplest fix is the "stick in the bypass" which is just a piece of 3/16" hardwood about 3/32" thick that is fit between the cylinder and the case in the bypass. There is a small lip on the bottom of the bypass that the stuffer is held in by. You can also fill 1/2 the bypass with JB Weld, will do the same thing.
Best, DennisT
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Thanks guys. That gives me more things to try. I never would have thought of putting a stick in the by pass.
Joe
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About a year ago I plans built 2 Ringmasters. One I put in a brand new Fox.35 the other I put in a Torpedo .19. When I try any genitive G maneuver the Fox just stops it doesn't go lean or act like it starves for fuel it is like you shut the switch off. It dose inside loops just fine but no chance for a figure 8. Also it stops just going up and down the instant I put in down elevator but it has enough momentum to start again. At first I thought it was a defect in the tank I took off the back of the tank but found nothing. I tried putting extensions on the tank vents to get some ram air pressure, didn't help. I tried running it rich to 4 cycle but it doesn't have enough power to take off. I run it as rich as it will fly the airplane. I saw a thread about turning the spray bar so the hole is just out of site. didn't help. I saw another thread about putting the prop on so it is vertical up to compression. No change. Dose any body have any other ideas I could try?
This is a very well-known phenomena, with a well-known solution, search for "fox burp fix". The solution is to put a piece of wood inside the engine, in the bypass, to take up space. There may be other things wrong, too, but this is almost universal, and almost always happens to one degree or another. Ignore anyone who says it doesn't happen or that this is not the fix, even though they will descend on this thread to talk you out of it
Brett
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Thanks guys. That gives me more things to try. I never would have thought of putting a stick in the by pass.
Joe
No one else did, either, until about 1995. They preferred to claim it was:
1) not happening, it was all in your mind
2) if it was happening, it was the fuel/plug*/tank
3) it was doing it what it was supposed to do, even if it quit and crashed the airplane
Frank Williams figured it out in about 1994-1995 and posted the information in SN. I had struggled with it for years, and found a superior solution (an OS 20FP), but it had never occurred to me to diagnose it as Frank had. When I saw it, it was a slap my forehead and shout "D'OH!" moment, it was obviously correct and should have been considered years earlier. We had been fighting what in retrospect had been similar problems with schneurle engine and had figured out that it had to do with the gas flow/gas velocity, but we never made the connection with the Fox.
Unfortunately, on profiles, fixing this problem leads you to the second problem, that is, now that it will keep running, it will run long enough to shake the airplane to bits in a few flights. That, too, has a solution but it's pretty expensive - a replacement crankshaft, and a replacement piston/liner. Those alone cost about what it costs to get two brand-new OS25LAs, which need no modifications and provide much better performance in most cases.
Brett
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I put a peace on maple in the bypass and that seemed to fix the sudden stoppage. Thanks again, Joe .
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What would happen if the engine were mounted "inboard" instead of outboard? Would not throwing fuel on the plug help any??
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What would happen if the engine were mounted "inboard" instead of outboard? Would not throwing fuel on the plug help any??
Read Frank's original article. The thought that, too. Then, when he tried it, it burped on *insides* instead of outsides.
The mechanism is NOT "throwing fuel on the plug". That's why the all the supposed plug-related fixes, including Fox's, do not reliably fix it.
Brett
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The Fox on a Ringmaster works OK if you build the ship for a Fox. By that I mean you need to build the motor mounts ST 60 style with grain running perpendicular to the mounts and 1/16" real plywood going back to the high point of the wing. On mine I ran the mounts back over the leading edge. Some guys have then used the 1/2oz glass/crape/roll method to add extra strength. My Ringmaster is 20 + years old and has had four different motors in it from the Fox, OS 20FS, PAW 19 diesel, OS 25. Some were shakers others not. Nose is still solid.
One trick you can do with the Fox is to get a slightly off balance prop and mount it so the heavy side is opposite the piston (i.e. put the piston at bottom dead center and mount the heavy blade straight up at 12:00 o'clock). This adds a little extra counter weight and helps with the shakes.
On my Fox's I like to lap them in so there is just a bit of pinch as the piston is at top dead center. A couple of runs rich and it is good to go with a lot less shaking. Also make sure to use 1/32" crush pads under the engine mount lugs if you have aluminum pad mounts to allow for the relief angle on the bottom of the lugs. If you pull the Fox down on hard mounts without the crush pads it will distort the case and cause it to bind and you will not like the run.
Best, DennisT
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Philly Fliers run lots of Fox 35s. No stick in the ports. Nadda. Powermaster 50/50, 5% or 10% fuel. Hot plug. Piston fit often an issue. Don't over prop. Bad vibes can be difficult, especially on profiles. Tame the vibration as much as possible. Don't run slobbering rich. George's 2/4 break wasn't that.
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If your Fox 35 does not have the bottom of the lugs flat and parallel, a machinist friend can fix it for you. I thought that was a universal condition, but I recently bought a 1970 something Fox stunt 35 which had the bottom of the lugs flat and parallel.
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Philly Fliers run lots of Fox 35s. No stick in the ports. Nadda. Powermaster 50/50, 5% or 10% fuel. Hot plug. Piston fit often an issue. Don't over prop. Bad vibes can be difficult, especially on profiles. Tame the vibration as much as possible. Don't run slobbering rich. George's 2/4 break wasn't that.
Right. I see this all the time. People have all sorts of problems including crashing inverted when the engine quits or burps, then they pull it off the circle and tell us all how they never have any problems.
Brett
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Right. I see this all the time. People have all sorts of problems including crashing inverted when the engine quits or burps, then they pull it off the circle and tell us all how they never have any problems.
Brett
In fairness, the person Dennis is referring to is Banjock, not a regular person. I think all can agree that Dan can get absolutely anything to run. n~
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I believe Danny came in third at the NATs in Classic flying an Old Time Galloping Comedian. Won many contests with that bird. The "Winningest Ringmaster of All Time" (won or placed in something like 20 Old Time Contests) is powered by a Fox 35. I just retrieved the oil soaked travesty, still wet with goo. The competition record written with magic marker on the monokote wing. Danny's Galloping Comedian had vibration issues early on. The mounts are kind of suspended in the barrel fues, not a very rigid mounting. Took a while to get that right. Also, a custom muffler hanging off the Fox, a C shape made to drape within the Aluminum cowl, magnified the bad vibe. Fox cutouts, in my experience, are usually a function of over tight piston/liner fit, fuel leak somewhere, or vibration. Foxes do burp when run at certain rpm ranges, usually this means an over rich setting or less than optimum fuel. In an case the burp is considerably less intense than the simulated buurrrrupppp of PW's current stunt war wagon. Besides TRUE Fox aficionados applaud a healthy eructation now and then. Ken Cook's Oriental has a fab running Fox 35. Lots of sport birdies in the Philly Fliers do their shapes powered by the 1949 designed Fox.
Hi Steve. Yes. Exactly. Dan gets the engines to run without putting a stick in the port. We follow that example.
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Hi Dennis,
Last time I saw Danny B. flying the RINGMASTER w/Fox .35, he was flying at Mach 2.5 with his hair on fire! LOL!! That Fox couldn't have burped had it wanted to!
Dan is always a bunch of fun and we all know he can wiggle the handle pretty good.
BIG Bear
RNMM/AMM
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That's an interesting aspect of Foxes, not always appreciated. They can be run hard and fast for years. Honestly, the way some of them are abused by our club, I don't understand their durability. Dan can also run the Foxes at a more stunt friendly speed. A recent Ringmaster/Fox 35 combo that Dan put together is a point it put it where you want to plane. A very nice predictable model. I believe that Ringmaster was a flea market buy, already assembled. Most of our Ringmasters have a similar history. It's possible to write pages and pages about Fox 35s. They are idiosyncratic, can be a hobby within our hobby. Machining quality varies engine to engine. There have been as well significant factory modifications over the years. Over tight piston cylinder fits happen in 40th anniversary and other late engines, engines which when right can be great running Foxes. Hand lapping might be needed, hand lapping by a person with the feel. The thin casting needs care when reassembling. Torquing the head correctly, critical. And so on.