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Thread: Want to see 87% warbirds using the P & W R-985 "Wasp Jr." 450 HP radial engine?

  1. #1

    Want to see 87% warbirds using the P & W R-985 "Wasp Jr." 450 HP radial engine?

    I am in the process of planning to introduce 87% kits of the T-28 "Trojan" military trainer, using the P & W 450 HP "Wasp Jr." radial engine (same as used in the PT-17 Stearman and Dehavilland Beaver), in composite form. That will be followed by the F4U Corsair, Sea Fury, FW-190 Focke Wulf, Japanese Zero, AT-6 "Texan", and others. This is kind of a market survey. Any ideas on how popular these might be? The R-985 can be had for around $43,000, and, apparently, are readily available. I will try to have the first T-28, even if not flyable yet, at Oshkosh next year. Any input would be appreciated.

  2. #2
    AcroGimp's Avatar
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    Interesting concept, I have toyed with a semi-scale T-28C running the Vedenyev M-14PF but did not go past conceptual design. The Trojan is a cool plane but not everyobody knows/agrees that, so market reaction might not be huge. Everyone knows and loves the Corsair but a much more complicated design. Sea Fury is another great one but probably also an acquired taste, the T-6, Zero and FW-190 would be I think popular.

    Might be interested in helping on this.

    'Gimp
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  3. #3
    Jim Clark's Avatar
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    There is a reason radial engines and radial powered aircraft prices have gone down, interest is on the way down for anything with a round engine. 2 of the aircraft I own are radials and I see myself as a caretaker and do not expect there to be any market for the sale of these when the time comes to hang up the license. Just took at the number that are being donated to, and then later sold by, museums. As the years go by there will be plenty of radial engine aircraft available for those, like myself, that will invest the time and money to fly them, but our numbers are dwindling rapidly.

    There have already been some very exciting aircraft designed to use the modern fuel injected Russian radial with impressive performance numbers but sales have not materialized.

    At a time when 100k will buy you an excellent FLYING RV8 which will travel faster than my A36, fly formation and aerobatics better than 95% of pilots are capable of, and do it on 180HP for a fraction of the operating costs I would question if there is a market for the aircraft you are contemplating.

    Your efforts to determine the market are admirable, now don't shoot the messenger.
    Jim Clark, Chairman National Biplane Fly In, www.nationalbiplaneflyin.com. Currently flying: 1929 Waco CSO, 1939 Waco EGC-8, 1946 Piper J-3, 1955 Piper PA22/20, 1956 Beech G35, 1984 Beech A36 & 2001 Vans RV9.
    You love a lot of things if you live around them, but there isn't any woman and there isn't any horse, nor any before nor any after, that is as lovely as a great airplane, and men who love them are faithful to them even though they leave them for others.
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  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Clark View Post
    There is a reason radial engines and radial powered aircraft prices have gone down, interest is on the way down for anything with a round engine. 2 of the aircraft I own are radials and I see myself as a caretaker and do not expect there to be any market for the sale of these when the time comes to hang up the license. Just took at the number that are being donated to, and then later sold by, museums. As the years go by there will be plenty of radial engine aircraft available for those, like myself, that will invest the time and money to fly them, but our numbers are dwindling rapidly.

    There have already been some very exciting aircraft designed to use the modern fuel injected Russian radial with impressive performance numbers but sales have not materialized.

    At a time when 100k will buy you an excellent FLYING RV8 which will travel faster than my A36, fly formation and aerobatics better than 95% of pilots are capable of, and do it on 180HP for a fraction of the operating costs I would question if there is a market for the aircraft you are contemplating.

    Your efforts to determine the market are admirable, now don't shoot the messenger.
    I just think the military duplication of it, especially the Corsair, Zero, FW-190, is a novelty that people who can afford it would be intrigued by. There are people who build the 50% size of these, so if a larger radial is used I think there would be some appeal for the 87% sizes. The RV-8 has a pretty small cockpit. The RV-8 can only carry two people, where the A36 can carry six. Thanks for your input.

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by AcroGimp View Post
    Interesting concept, I have toyed with a semi-scale T-28C running the Vedenyev M-14PF but did not go past conceptual design. The Trojan is a cool plane but not everyobody knows/agrees that, so market reaction might not be huge. Everyone knows and loves the Corsair but a much more complicated design. Sea Fury is another great one but probably also an acquired taste, the T-6, Zero and FW-190 would be I think popular.

    Might be interested in helping on this.

    'Gimp
    Ok, might want your help. I think I may be able to do a Kickstarter campaign (www.kickstarter.com) to get funding to at least build the airframe and add the real landing gear and engine later, to display at airshows to attract investors and future customers.

  6. #6

    Goggles Great idea!

    Quote Originally Posted by starjetpilot View Post
    I am in the process of planning to introduce 87% kits of the T-28 "Trojan" military trainer, using the P & W 450 HP "Wasp Jr." radial engine (same as used in the PT-17 Stearman and Dehavilland Beaver), in composite form. That will be followed by the F4U Corsair, Sea Fury, FW-190 Focke Wulf, Japanese Zero, AT-6 "Texan", and others. This is kind of a market survey. Any ideas on how popular these might be? The R-985 can be had for around $43,000, and, apparently, are readily available. I will try to have the first T-28, even if not flyable yet, at Oshkosh next year. Any input would be appreciated.
    I'd love to see such a beast become available.

    Some comments:
    - I think it was the Lionheart which used an R-985, and I believe that aircraft is either dead, or severely languishing. It would be instructive to learn from that group what issues might arise.
    - Over the past several years the R-985 is getting more expensive, not less. Outright prices now hover between $45k and $55k, where they were around $30k just 8-10 years ago.
    - It's not so much the engine which is expensive and difficult to source, but the prop, oil system, and exhaust which make these un-economical to acquire. A prop and exhaust could easily top $18k.

    Nobody really knows how popular they might be. You could do focus groups and all sorts of market research, but the end result would be anyone's guess. What would you consider popular? Two or three airplanes? Ten or twelve, hundreds? Best to define success first and shoot for that.

  7. #7
    Ok, maybe I will switch to produce the Mustang, Spitfire, P-38, Warhawk types with aluminum-block V-10s.

  8. #8

    Maybe another scale?

    Quote Originally Posted by starjetpilot View Post
    Ok, maybe I will switch to produce the Mustang, Spitfire, P-38, Warhawk types with aluminum-block V-10s.
    Don't get me wrong, anything with an R-985 on the front or mounted on the wings is a great machine!

    I checked and 87% of a T-28 would weigh in at over 5,500 pounds, and an 87% Corsair would be over 7,500 pounds - pretty serious airplane tonnage! For reference, a Beech 18 with 2 R-985's weighs in at around 6,500 pounds...

  9. #9
    Matt Gonitzke's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jeffsunzeri View Post
    Don't get me wrong, anything with an R-985 on the front or mounted on the wings is a great machine!

    I checked and 87% of a T-28 would weigh in at over 5,500 pounds, and an 87% Corsair would be over 7,500 pounds - pretty serious airplane tonnage! For reference, a Beech 18 with 2 R-985's weighs in at around 6,500 pounds...
    Why would an 87% scale airplane weigh 87% of what the full size aircraft weighs? Linear dimensions scale linearly, but area, weight, volume, etc, do not.

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Matt Gonitzke View Post
    Why would an 87% scale airplane weigh 87% of what the full size aircraft weighs? Linear dimensions scale linearly, but area, weight, volume, etc, do not.
    Well then what does the 87% refer to if not one of area or volume? My point of course is that anywhere near 87% of the prototype is going to be a large aircraft.

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