Eggenfellner E6

The Eggenfellner E6 is a series of American aircraft engines, developed by Jan Eggenfellner and produced by Eggenfellner Aircraft of Edgewater, Volusia County, Florida for use in homebuilt aircraft.[1][2]

E6
Type Aircraft engine
National origin United States
Manufacturer Eggenfellner Aircraft
Designed by Jan Eggenfellner
First run 1994
Produced 1994-2009
Unit cost US$25,995 (E6-3.6L, 2009)

Design and development

Based on Subaru automotive engines, the E6 series are all six cylinder, four-stroke, horizontally-opposed, liquid-cooled, gasoline engine designs, with mechanical gearbox reduction drives with a reduction ratio of 2.02:1. They employ electronic ignition and produce up to 250 hp (186 kW) at 6000 rpm.[1][2]

The engine series was produced from 1994 until 2009, when the company went out of business in the Great Recession.[2]

Applications

The company's engines found a high degree of customer acceptance among owners of Van's Aircraft types, due to the completeness of the package provided and the low price. In 2003 it was reported that 298 engines had been sold to RV builders.[3]

Other applications:

Variants

E6-3.0L
3,000 cc (183.1 cu in) engine, that produces 240 hp (179 kW) at 6500 rpm.[1]
E6-3.6L
3,600 cc (219.7 cu in) engine, that produces 250 hp (186 kW) at 6000 rpm.[1]

Specifications (E6-3.0L)

Data from World Directory of Leisure Aviation 2011-12[1]

General characteristics

  • Type: Six cylinder, four stroke aircraft engine
  • Displacement: 3,000 cc (183.1 cu in)
  • Dry weight: 159 kg (350.5 lb)

Components

Performance

  • Power output: 240 hp (179 kW) at 6500 rpm
gollark: No communist revolutions!
gollark: Videos are sent uncompressed at "16k³", the marketing name for multi-layer transparent 16k displays which don't actually have 16000 layers.
gollark: 2050: JavaScript development is conducted entirely on Google gPhones™. Hello World imports over 2000 packages, one of which is deprecated per day. Types have now been deprecated and everything is implicitly converted based on a 1000-page spec nobody ever reads. Applications take up about 50GB of space each and use about half of a recent 60GHz carbon-nanotube ARMv18 CPU's processing power. Each browser tab uses 1TB of RAM, more if it's playing videos.
gollark: For practical high-level programming, no.
gollark: Bad.

See also

Related lists

References

  1. Bayerl, Robby; Martin Berkemeier; et al: World Directory of Leisure Aviation 2011-12, pages 238-239. WDLA UK, Lancaster UK, 2011. ISSN 1368-485X
  2. "Viking Aircraft Engines Contact Info". vikingaircraftengines.com. Archived from the original on 28 April 2015. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  3. "Eggenfellner Engines -- Looking Big". aero-news.net. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.