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		AV8ORJWC
 
 
  Joined: 13 Jul 2006 Posts: 1149 Location: Aurora, Oregon "Home of VANS"
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 6:48 pm    Post subject: [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit | 
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				My apologies to the world wide group but Fred’s post below is just too good not to share in the spirit of improved knowledge.  Can anyone here agree to the value of data like Tim and Michael present?  Or is it just a bunch of Lurkers from OSH?  
    
 I am going to Google “Speed with Economy”.  If it is available from Technical Books, then all the better.  What say the rest of you on Moreno’s Aviator’s Challenge?  
    
 John Cox  
 #40600  
          
   
 From: Lancair Mailing List [mailto:lml(at)lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Fred Moreno
  Sent: Monday, October 23, 2006 1:38 PM
  To: Lancair Mailing List
  Subject: [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit  
   
    
 This forum is superb for exchanging ideas, problems, and solutions, but we seem to be very short on hard data.  Maybe that is because it is hard to get, or because some people don’t know how to calibrate and test carefully, or some don’t want to know.  As a result we have a lot of anecdotal evidence, much of which is clearly wrong.  Example: one LIV-P owner proudly announced at the Lancair dinner he was getting 305 knots at 70%.  I had flown in that the airplane, and knew the airspeed indicator was not calibrated, and the owner’s calculation was based on an E6B which meant it had a built in 20 knot error based on OAT and compressibility effects.  Put that in, and you get about 285 knots pretty much like everyone else.  And he really had no clue about the exact power setting, just a guess.  
    
 Maybe we just prefer rumors and BS to facts.  Perhaps that is why rumors are so popular.  Facts are such nasty things.  They just won’t go away.    
    
 I propose we make a concerted effort to gather and exchange reproducible, defensible data, and share it with the group.  Not the swing of the needle in an updraft or satisfying GPS reading while screaming downwind, but data that is good enough for us to compare the relative performance of props, modifications, etc.    
    
 With the new Chelton (and other) instrumentation, factory calibrated far better than your steam gauges, good GPS data, and careful data recording (OAT, Altitude, fuel flow, etc.) we can get excellent data without a long and painful calibration process.  The new Electronics International MVP-50 is also a superb instrument, built to good standards with reasonably accurate sensors and ability to record and regurgitate vast amounts of data.  When I was ordering mine, I found that some of their customers have used the extra channels to monitor things like engine cooling air delta P, firewall temperature (how hot is that epoxy REALLY getting?), and other nuggets of information useful to the rest of us.    
    
 This rant is motivated by last night’s rereading Kent Paser’s excellent book, Speed with Economy (1994, possibly available through EAA).  It documents Kent’s 20+ years of modifications with his 160 HP Mustang II.  Kent is an aeronautical engineer, and took the time to calibrate his instruments and conduct careful experiments making changes one at a time to isolate what worked and what didn’t.  Net result: an increase of 64 MPH in top speed and 59 MPH in cruise speed.  Slowed to his old economy cruise speed, fuel flow was cut IN HALF.    
    
 Our Lancairs already incorporate a lot of the features that Kent explored and adopted, but most of us have failed to learn his (and other) lessons about exhaust systems, engine air cooling, exhaust air leakage in low pressure areas, where we should lavish our attention to detail and such.    
    
 If we can collect and disseminate GOOD data in a format that another can study, digest, and learn, then we can advance our aviation interests even better than we are now doing.    
    
 Moreno’s challenge: produce and publish (here, of course) “test reports” documenting what you measured, how you measured it,  if and how you checked your instruments, and any helpful comments.  I promise that if I ever get my Lancair IV finished (early next year?) I will keep testing and recording and share the news, good or bad, because it should not be an ego thing, but a sharing of information thing to help advance our “state-of-the-art.”   
    
 I recall one year that Brent Regan and I walked around Oshkosh trying to capture the essence of the place in a few short words.  The Greeks thought the world consisted of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water.  We concluded that Oshkosh consisted of Hope, Denial (of the laws of physics), Money, and Bullshit.         
    
 It need not be that way.  Advancement comes from knowledge, and knowledge comes (in part) from testing, experiments, and real data.    
    
 Fred Moreno, Thirsting for Data  
      
   
 --
  20/10/2006
    [quote][b]
 
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		semb
 
 
  Joined: 23 Jul 2006 Posts: 7
 
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 8:00 pm    Post subject: [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit | 
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				One step towards us having data we can make sense of would be for 
 someone to put together a short FAQ on how to gather and report 
 performance data - ideally together with a form that can be filled out 
 with data. Using the form when reporting would make it obvious what 
 units were used, and which pieces of data were missing, etc. This would 
 be a great step towards making results comparable, or at least knowing 
 that they are not.
 
 Simon
 John W. Cox wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
  My apologies to the world wide group but Fred’s post below is just too 
  good not to share in the spirit of improved knowledge. Can anyone here 
  agree to the value of data like Tim and Michael present? Or is it just 
  a bunch of Lurkers from OSH?
 
  I am going to Google “Speed with Economy”. If it is available from 
  Technical Books, then all the better. What say the rest of you on 
  Moreno’s Aviator’s Challenge?
 
  John Cox
 
  #40600
 
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  *From:* Lancair Mailing List [mailto:lml(at)lancaironline.net] *On Behalf 
  Of *Fred Moreno
  *Sent:* Monday, October 23, 2006 1:38 PM
  *To:* Lancair Mailing List
  *Subject:* [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit
 
  This forum is superb for exchanging ideas, problems, and solutions, 
  but we seem to be very short on hard data. Maybe that is because it is 
  hard to get, or because some people don’t know how to calibrate and 
  test carefully, or some don’t want to know. As a result we have a lot 
  of anecdotal evidence, much of which is clearly wrong. Example: one 
  LIV-P owner proudly announced at the Lancair dinner he was getting 305 
  knots at 70%. I had flown in that the airplane, and knew the airspeed 
  indicator was not calibrated, and the owner’s calculation was based on 
  an E6B which meant it had a built in 20 knot error based on OAT and 
  compressibility effects. Put that in, and you get about 285 knots 
  pretty much like everyone else. And he really had no clue about the 
  exact power setting, just a guess.
 
  Maybe we just prefer rumors and BS to facts. Perhaps that is why 
  rumors are so popular. Facts are such nasty things. They just won’t go 
  away.
 
  I propose we make a concerted effort to gather and exchange 
  reproducible, defensible data, and share it with the group. Not the 
  swing of the needle in an updraft or satisfying GPS reading while 
  screaming downwind, but data that is good enough for us to compare the 
  relative performance of props, modifications, etc.
 
  With the new Chelton (and other) instrumentation, factory calibrated 
  far better than your steam gauges, good GPS data, and careful data 
  recording (OAT, Altitude, fuel flow, etc.) we can get excellent data 
  without a long and painful calibration process. The new Electronics 
  International MVP-50 is also a superb instrument, built to good 
  standards with reasonably accurate sensors and ability to record and 
  regurgitate vast amounts of data. When I was ordering mine, I found 
  that some of their customers have used the extra channels to monitor 
  things like engine cooling air delta P, firewall temperature (how hot 
  is that epoxy REALLY getting?), and other nuggets of information 
  useful to the rest of us.
 
  This rant is motivated by last night’s rereading Kent Paser’s 
  excellent book, _Speed with Economy_ (1994, possibly available through 
  EAA). It documents Kent’s 20+ years of modifications with his 160 HP 
  Mustang II. Kent is an aeronautical engineer, and took the time to 
  calibrate his instruments and conduct careful experiments making 
  changes one at a time to isolate what worked and what didn’t. Net 
  result: an increase of *64 MPH* in top speed and *59 MPH* in cruise 
  speed. Slowed to his old economy cruise speed, fuel flow was cut IN HALF.
 
  Our Lancairs already incorporate a lot of the features that Kent 
  explored and adopted, but most of us have failed to learn his (and 
  other) lessons about exhaust systems, engine air cooling, exhaust air 
  leakage in low pressure areas, where we should lavish our attention to 
  detail and such.
 
  If we can collect and disseminate GOOD data in a format that another 
  can study, digest, and learn, then we can advance our aviation 
  interests even better than we are now doing.
 
  Moreno’s challenge: produce and publish (here, of course) “test 
  reports” documenting what you measured, how you measured it, if and 
  how you checked your instruments, and any helpful comments. I promise 
  that if I ever get my Lancair IV finished (early next year?) I will 
  keep testing and recording and share the news, good or bad, because it 
  should not be an ego thing, but a sharing of information thing to help 
  advance our “state-of-the-art.”
 
  I recall one year that Brent Regan and I walked around Oshkosh trying 
  to capture the essence of the place in a few short words. The Greeks 
  thought the world consisted of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water. We 
  concluded that Oshkosh consisted of Hope, Denial (of the laws of 
  physics), Money, and Bullshit.
 
  It need not be that way. Advancement comes from knowledge, and 
  knowledge comes (in part) from testing, experiments, and real *data*.
 
  Fred Moreno, Thirsting for Data
  --
  20/10/2006
 
  *
  *
 
 | 	 
 
 
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		semb
 
 
  Joined: 23 Jul 2006 Posts: 7
 
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 8:01 pm    Post subject: [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit | 
				     | 
			 
			
				
  | 
			 
			
				One step towards us having data we can make sense of would be for 
 someone to put together a short FAQ on how to gather and report 
 performance data - ideally together with a form that can be filled out 
 with data. Using the form when reporting would make it obvious what 
 units were used, and which pieces of data were missing, etc. This would 
 be a great step towards making results comparable, or at least making it 
 clear where they are not.
 
 Simon
 40420
 John W. Cox wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
  My apologies to the world wide group but Fred’s post below is just too 
  good not to share in the spirit of improved knowledge. Can anyone here 
  agree to the value of data like Tim and Michael present? Or is it just 
  a bunch of Lurkers from OSH?
 
  I am going to Google “Speed with Economy”. If it is available from 
  Technical Books, then all the better. What say the rest of you on 
  Moreno’s Aviator’s Challenge?
 
  John Cox
 
  #40600
 
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  *From:* Lancair Mailing List [mailto:lml(at)lancaironline.net] *On Behalf 
  Of *Fred Moreno
  *Sent:* Monday, October 23, 2006 1:38 PM
  *To:* Lancair Mailing List
  *Subject:* [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit
 
  This forum is superb for exchanging ideas, problems, and solutions, 
  but we seem to be very short on hard data. Maybe that is because it is 
  hard to get, or because some people don’t know how to calibrate and 
  test carefully, or some don’t want to know. As a result we have a lot 
  of anecdotal evidence, much of which is clearly wrong. Example: one 
  LIV-P owner proudly announced at the Lancair dinner he was getting 305 
  knots at 70%. I had flown in that the airplane, and knew the airspeed 
  indicator was not calibrated, and the owner’s calculation was based on 
  an E6B which meant it had a built in 20 knot error based on OAT and 
  compressibility effects. Put that in, and you get about 285 knots 
  pretty much like everyone else. And he really had no clue about the 
  exact power setting, just a guess.
 
  Maybe we just prefer rumors and BS to facts. Perhaps that is why 
  rumors are so popular. Facts are such nasty things. They just won’t go 
  away.
 
  I propose we make a concerted effort to gather and exchange 
  reproducible, defensible data, and share it with the group. Not the 
  swing of the needle in an updraft or satisfying GPS reading while 
  screaming downwind, but data that is good enough for us to compare the 
  relative performance of props, modifications, etc.
 
  With the new Chelton (and other) instrumentation, factory calibrated 
  far better than your steam gauges, good GPS data, and careful data 
  recording (OAT, Altitude, fuel flow, etc.) we can get excellent data 
  without a long and painful calibration process. The new Electronics 
  International MVP-50 is also a superb instrument, built to good 
  standards with reasonably accurate sensors and ability to record and 
  regurgitate vast amounts of data. When I was ordering mine, I found 
  that some of their customers have used the extra channels to monitor 
  things like engine cooling air delta P, firewall temperature (how hot 
  is that epoxy REALLY getting?), and other nuggets of information 
  useful to the rest of us.
 
  This rant is motivated by last night’s rereading Kent Paser’s 
  excellent book, _Speed with Economy_ (1994, possibly available through 
  EAA). It documents Kent’s 20+ years of modifications with his 160 HP 
  Mustang II. Kent is an aeronautical engineer, and took the time to 
  calibrate his instruments and conduct careful experiments making 
  changes one at a time to isolate what worked and what didn’t. Net 
  result: an increase of *64 MPH* in top speed and *59 MPH* in cruise 
  speed. Slowed to his old economy cruise speed, fuel flow was cut IN HALF.
 
  Our Lancairs already incorporate a lot of the features that Kent 
  explored and adopted, but most of us have failed to learn his (and 
  other) lessons about exhaust systems, engine air cooling, exhaust air 
  leakage in low pressure areas, where we should lavish our attention to 
  detail and such.
 
  If we can collect and disseminate GOOD data in a format that another 
  can study, digest, and learn, then we can advance our aviation 
  interests even better than we are now doing.
 
  Moreno’s challenge: produce and publish (here, of course) “test 
  reports” documenting what you measured, how you measured it, if and 
  how you checked your instruments, and any helpful comments. I promise 
  that if I ever get my Lancair IV finished (early next year?) I will 
  keep testing and recording and share the news, good or bad, because it 
  should not be an ego thing, but a sharing of information thing to help 
  advance our “state-of-the-art.”
 
  I recall one year that Brent Regan and I walked around Oshkosh trying 
  to capture the essence of the place in a few short words. The Greeks 
  thought the world consisted of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water. We 
  concluded that Oshkosh consisted of Hope, Denial (of the laws of 
  physics), Money, and Bullshit.
 
  It need not be that way. Advancement comes from knowledge, and 
  knowledge comes (in part) from testing, experiments, and real *data*.
 
  Fred Moreno, Thirsting for Data
  --
  20/10/2006
 
  *
  *
 
 | 	 
 
 
  |  | - The Matronics RV10-List Email Forum - |  |   |  Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:
 
  http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List |  
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		LloydDR(at)wernerco.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 24, 2006 5:49 am    Post subject: [LML] Hope, Denial, Money and Bullshit | 
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				Here is where I just purchased it, he is going to wonder  what caused the huge increase in sales, ain't the internet a wonderful  thing.....now if we can just all read it and understand it! http://speedwitheconomy.com/
   
  Dan 40269 (N289DT)
  RV10E
 
    From: owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com  [mailto:owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of John W.  Cox
 Sent: Monday, October 23, 2006 10:48 PM
 To:  rv10-list(at)matronics.com
 Subject: FW: [LML] Hope, Denial,  Money and Bullshit
  
   
 My apologies to the  world wide group but Fred’s post below is just too good not to share in the  spirit of improved knowledge.  Can anyone here agree to the value of data  like Tim and Michael present?  Or is it just a bunch of Lurkers from  OSH? 
   
 I am going to Google  “Speed with Economy”.  If it is available from Technical Books, then all  the better.  What say the rest of you on Moreno’s Aviator’s  Challenge? 
   
 John  Cox 
 #40600 
      
  
 From: Lancair  Mailing List [mailto:lml(at)lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Fred Moreno
 Sent: Monday, October 23, 2006 1:38  PM
 To: Lancair Mailing  List
 Subject: [LML] Hope,  Denial, Money and Bullshit
  
   
 This forum is superb for exchanging  ideas, problems, and solutions, but we seem to be very short on hard data.   Maybe that is because it is hard to get, or because some people don’t know how  to calibrate and test carefully, or some don’t want to know.  As a result  we have a lot of anecdotal evidence, much of which is clearly wrong.   Example: one LIV-P owner proudly announced at the Lancair dinner he was getting  305 knots at 70%.  I had flown in that the airplane, and knew the airspeed  indicator was not calibrated, and the owner’s calculation was based on an E6B  which meant it had a built in 20 knot error based on OAT and compressibility  effects.  Put that in, and you get about 285 knots pretty much like  everyone else.  And he really had no clue about the exact power setting,  just a guess. 
   
 Maybe we just prefer rumors and BS  to facts.  Perhaps that is why rumors are so popular.  Facts are such  nasty things.  They just won’t go away.   
   
 I propose we make a concerted effort  to gather and exchange reproducible, defensible data, and share it with the  group.  Not the swing of the needle in an updraft or satisfying GPS reading  while screaming downwind, but data that is good enough for us to compare the  relative performance of props, modifications, etc.   
   
 With the new Chelton (and other)  instrumentation, factory calibrated far better than your steam gauges, good GPS  data, and careful data recording (OAT, Altitude, fuel flow, etc.) we can get  excellent data without a long and painful calibration process.  The new  Electronics International MVP-50 is also a superb instrument, built to good  standards with reasonably accurate sensors and ability to record and regurgitate  vast amounts of data.  When I was ordering mine, I found that some of their  customers have used the extra channels to monitor things like engine cooling air  delta P, firewall temperature (how hot is that epoxy REALLY getting?), and other  nuggets of information useful to the rest of us.   
   
 This rant is motivated by last  night’s rereading Kent Paser’s excellent book, Speed with Economy (1994,  possibly available through EAA).  It documents Kent’s 20+ years of  modifications with his 160 HP Mustang II.  Kent is an aeronautical  engineer, and took the time to calibrate his instruments and conduct careful  experiments making changes one at a time to isolate what worked and what  didn’t.  Net result: an increase of 64 MPH in top speed and  59  MPH in cruise speed.  Slowed to his old economy cruise  speed, fuel flow was cut IN HALF.   
   
 Our Lancairs already incorporate a  lot of the features that Kent explored and adopted, but most of us have failed  to learn his (and other) lessons about exhaust systems, engine air cooling,  exhaust air leakage in low pressure areas, where we should lavish our attention  to detail and such.   
   
 If we can collect and disseminate  GOOD data in a format that another can study, digest, and learn, then we can  advance our aviation interests even better than we are now doing.    
   
 Moreno’s challenge: produce and publish  (here, of course) “test reports” documenting what you measured, how you measured  it,  if and how you checked your instruments, and any helpful  comments.  I promise that if I ever get my Lancair IV finished (early next  year?) I will keep testing and recording and share the news, good or bad,  because it should not be an ego thing, but a sharing of information thing to  help advance our “state-of-the-art.”  
   
 I recall one year that Brent Regan  and I walked around Oshkosh trying to capture the essence of the place in a few  short words.  The Greeks thought the world consisted of Earth, Air, Fire,  and Water.  We concluded that Oshkosh consisted of Hope, Denial (of the  laws of physics), Money, and Bullshit.         
   
 It need not be that way.   Advancement comes from knowledge, and knowledge comes (in part) from testing,  experiments, and real data.    
   
 Fred Moreno, Thirsting for  Data
 
  
 --
 20/10/2006
 [quote]
 
 href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List
 
 [b]
 
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