[SPAM] Re: Rust

Ken Velez kvelez at comcast.net
Tue Oct 12 13:15:55 AKDT 2004


I do what Dean said and had exelent results, at least 400/500 flights at least on Power master 15%.

Ken
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: ray ayestaran 
  To: discussion at nsrca.org 
  Sent: Tuesday, October 12, 2004 4:59 PM
  Subject: [SPAM] Re: Rust


  these bearings should last at least 300 flights, add 2 cups of reg gas to a gal of your preferred model fuel - you will notice no diff in performance but you will get necessary anti rust and cleansing additives that are in the gas. 
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: XCellHeli at aol.com 
    To: discussion at nsrca.org 
    Sent: Tuesday, October 12, 2004 2:16 PM
    Subject: Rust


    RE: OS 1.40 rear bearing rust - by Bax OS Factory Engine Support
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    On a Pattern engine, being flown in a Pattern airplane, 100 flights would be about normal for bearing wear.  A competitive Pattern flyer will need to change out the bearings 1-2 times per flying season (depending upon how much practice time is spent).

    Corrosion is caused by model fuel.  The alcohol in the fuel absorbs water.  Synthetic oils are slightly acidic and are not corrosion preventers, they are lubricants.  The two are not necessarily the same.  Some spent combustion products always work themselves into the lower-end of the engine and they are slightly acidic.  This encourages corrosion by providing an electrolyte between the dissimilar metals in the engine (aluminum and steel).

    You need to run the engine dry of fuel at the end of each flying session, and then flood the engine with an after-run product.  One of the hobby blends of after run oil, Marvel Mystery Oil, automatic transmission fluid, non-graphite gun oil, a good coating-type machine tool oil...all will work well.

    If the fuel has more than 25%-50% of the oil blend being castor oil, you'll also get significant corrosion protection.  Engines run on all-castor fuels don't get much corrosion, but you do have to clean the engine to remove the varnish buildup from the castor oil.  It also will become gummy when it sits for a long time. 


    ----------- End of Message -------------

    The message can be located at:

    http://www.rcuniverse.com/forum/fb.asp?m=1802477


    AOL users click here to view the thread

    Chris Dansereau Sr.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.f3a.us/pipermail/nsrca-discussion/attachments/20041012/cc9f2d9e/attachment.html


More information about the NSRCA-discussion mailing list