Superior Air Parts XP-360

The Superior Air Parts XP-360 is an aircraft engine, designed and produced by Superior Air Parts of Coppell, Texas, United States for use in homebuilt aircraft.[1]

Superior Air Parts XP-360
Type Aircraft engine
National origin United States
Manufacturer Superior Air Parts

The company is owned by the Chinese company Superior Aviation Beijing, which is 60% owned by Chairman Cheng Shenzong and 40% owned by Beijing E-Town, an economic development agency of the municipal government of Beijing.

Design and development

The engine is a four-cylinder four-stroke, horizontally-opposed, 360 cu in (5,899 cc) displacement, air-cooled, direct-drive, gasoline engine design. It produces 180 hp (134 kW) standard, although 170 hp (127 kW) and 195 hp (145 kW) versions are available. It is available in carburetor and fuel injected versions.[1][2]

The engine is not type certified and is therefore intended for homebuilt aircraft.[3]

Specifications (XP-360)

Data from Tacke and manufacturer[1][2]

General characteristics

  • Type: Four cylinder, four stroke aircraft engine
  • Displacement: 360 cc (22.0 cu in)
  • Length: 32.8 in (833 mm)
  • Width: 33.4 in (848 mm)
  • Height: 24.6 in (625 mm)
  • Dry weight: 288 to 297 lb (130.6 to 134.7 kg) depending on configuration

Components

Performance

gollark: Yes. You can observe people doing mourning and its effect on their behaviour and such. You can observe the effect of *belief in* the afterlife, but not the afterlife itself unless you have a model of it which is actually... interactable with.
gollark: If there's no way to actually detect or interact with it, i.e. it existing is indistinguishable from it not existing, the question of "does it exist" is not very meaningful.
gollark: You can use advanced "multiplication" technology to compute "expected value".
gollark: Ah, but it has a probability of still existing.
gollark: What do you mean "a priori"? Just come up with some ridiculous """pure logical proof""" that the afterlife exists regardless of observations of it?

See also

Related lists

References

  1. Tacke, Willi; Marino Boric; et al: World Directory of Light Aviation 2015-16, pages 262-263. Flying Pages Europe SARL, 2015. ISSN 1368-485X
  2. Superior Air Parts (2013). "Engine models". superiorairparts.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  3. Superior Air Parts (2013). "FAQ". superiorairparts.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.