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NACA VENTS

 
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fconsult(at)telus.net
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 2:31 pm    Post subject: NACA VENTS Reply with quote

James
For what its worth ,my RV4 has a Naca vent just above the rear canopy
rail in the back seat and the air flows out of the vent instead of blowing
in. It is allowing warm air to escape fom inside instead of cooling air
flowing in.

Chris


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James Baldwin



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 23

PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 3:51 pm    Post subject: NACA VENTS Reply with quote

Chris -
I'm sure this is not the first time this subject has been discussed and
there are many different results with similar vent locations. Yours is
yet another result that must have some explanation. Is your fuselage
vented elsewhere exhausting the cockpit air? Obviously the pressure
inside the cockpit is greater than the local pressure outside the vent,
so I'd be interested to know what your strategy was during building. Of
course, maybe you like it the way it is? JBB.

Chris Fordham wrote:

Quote:


James
For what its worth ,my RV4 has a Naca vent just above the rear canopy
rail in the back seat and the air flows out of the vent instead of blowing
in. It is allowing warm air to escape fom inside instead of cooling air
flowing in.

Chris









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Lee Logan



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 86

PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 4:15 pm    Post subject: NACA VENTS Reply with quote

Another good vent location that will do the same thing is to louver one of
both of your aft inspection plates (just under the stabilizer on my RV-4).
Will make your vents more effective in that it will draw air through the
fuselage with a venturi effect.

On 2/28/06, Chris Fordham <fconsult(at)telus.net> wrote:
Quote:



James
For what its worth ,my RV4 has a Naca vent just above the rear
canopy
rail in the back seat and the air flows out of the vent instead of blowing
in. It is allowing warm air to escape fom inside instead of cooling air
flowing in.

Chris




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fconsult(at)telus.net
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 01, 2006 8:28 am    Post subject: NACA vents Reply with quote

Hi James
I bought the RV4 5years ago now so I didn't plan the position
of the NACA vents. There is two on the right hand canopy skirt one for the
pilot and one for the pax, and both exhaust air instead of blowing air. My
thoughts is this is a low pressure area on the side of the a/c and the air
is being sucked out. There is also vents on either side of the front
fuselage below the split line and these provide alot of cold air. Most of
the time it is comfortable flying here in the winter with all the vents
closed and the heater on full. In summer or if I go down California way the
rear seater sometimes doesn't get enough cool air.
On the HR 2 I've put an intake under the wing for the passenger and
haven't quite decided what to do for the front seat.
Chris
do not archive


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Vince Frazier



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 132

PostPosted: Wed Mar 01, 2006 10:28 am    Post subject: NACA vents Reply with quote

SNIP Vince F..... I would be curious if your OAT (pickup in front)
ever acts in non-linear fashion... suspecting maybe heat soak ... or
reflecting backflow at

certain airspeeds. If you slow down, does the temp OAT cool down ?
John Meyers SNIP
************************************************************************
*********

Non-linear?? backflow? Heat soak? Wow, no offense, but we're talking
about a simple case of hot air coming in here. Smile This thread
prompted me to go take some actual measurements yesterday using the OAT
and a regular, non-electrical, alcohol thermometer. TWO thermometers,
not one. And the alcohol thermometer confirmed that the OAT thermometer
was dead on.

Quote:
From numbers that I took from the OAT gauge a few days ago, I was
getting as much as a 15 or 20 degree difference in the front and rear

vents.

My cowl louvers were closed during that earlier flight. I had opened
the louvers up for the flight mentioned below. Unfortunately I didn't
have a rear vent thermometer reading for the flights when the louvers
were closed, but having the louvers opened did seem to make the front
vent temps cooler.

Results showed that the front vents (both of them) were putting out 66
degree F air and the rear vent was putting out 57 degree F air. Hmmm, 9
degrees difference. Not the 15 or 20 that I saw on a 30 degree day with
the louvers closed, but still considerably different. FWIW, the air
temp on the ground was about 64 degrees F, so the rear vent was putting
out air at the temp that I'd expect at 3500' and the front vent was
heating it up somewhat.

In addition to having the louvers opened this time, I also taped over
the cowl seams on the left side of the plane. This had no effect on the
temps, both left and right front vents were the same.

I'll take a thermometer with me for the next several times that I fly
and see if this pattern is consistent.

I can't say why Greg Nelson's gets cool air and I don't. Probably
because of a difference in engine cooling set up. Maybe it's a
climate difference between Indiana (wx always humid) and wherever Greg
lives (California?)?

I stand by my earlier comment, if I were installing NACA vents again,
I'd put them under the wing or someplace other than on the fuselage
sides. YMMV.

Vince


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_________________
Vince Frazier
3965 Caborn Road
Mount Vernon, IN 47620
812-464-1839 work
812-985-7309 home
F-1H Rocket, N540VF
http://vincesrocket.com/
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