Continental A 65-8 engine for Ressu "Snoopy"Sunnuntai 29.9.2024 - Tuesday Club member The OH-XEA “ Snoopy” experimental aircraft, built by the Hietanen brothers from Turku in the 1960s, now under restoration at the Tuesday Club, had a Continental A 65 engine. Before the Snoopy it was in the Piper Cub aircraft of the Turku Flying Club. The engine on the Snoopy hasn’t survived, and there is no knowledge about its fate. So we started to ask around whether a surplus engine was to be found somewhere. We could do with quite a dilapidated engine, since we weren’t restoring the Snoopy to an airworthy condition. Photo by Esko Keskinen (1969).
Our query was successful, as we were offered the Continental A 65-8 engine of the PIK-11 “Tumppu” (OH-YMD) single-seat sport aircraft that had crashed in Mikkeli on 7 August 1999. The engine was damaged and burned in the accident. However, it could be refurbished to look externally intact, to be attached to the nose of Snoopy. The miserable condition of the engine had been worsened by its exposure of several years to the mercy of the weather, thus having heavily rusted through. To start he refurbishment of this engine in the Tuesday Club, we fetched it from Tampere in the boot of a Skoda Octavia. Our purpose is neither to repair the Continental engine into working condition nor to restore the airworthiness of Snoopy. To refurbish the engine, we will dismantle it to pieces as fully as possible, then after cleaning and fixing those, the engine will be re-assembled and attached to the nose of Snoopy. All parts of this damaged Continental are not remaining, as some of them were destroyed in the crash. However, we hope to find or to get substitute parts for the missing ones later on. We also welcome any parts rejected in repairing and servicing Continental engines. Dismantling of the engine was started outdoors at the Finnish Aviation Museum by detaching the badly damaged engine mount and the lower oil sump, which were still attached to the engine. At the hub of the propeller, the burnt propeller stem remained. After the nuts of the hub bolts were loosened, the propeller torso could be detached. Next the remaining left-hand side exhaust pipe, spark plugs, both magnetos attached to the timing gear cover, the cover itself and the sprockets under it were removed. The lid of the oil pump under the timing gear cover was opened and the pump sprockets were taken out to be cleaned. Photo by Esko Rossi. Dismantling the engine was continued at the Museum’s restoration shop. The engine was fastened to a trestle, where the engine could be turned around its longitudinal axis, like in a barbeque. This greatly helped the handling of the engine. Now we detached the valve rods of the rocker arms and thereafter the rocker axles, after which the rocker arms came off the cylinder head. It became clear that the valves didn’t budge an inch. We tried to make them move and loosen them by dissolving with antirust agents. Also the propeller hub was stuck firmly to the crankshaft. To dislodge the hub for cleaning, we applied various antirust and lubricant agents, but the propeller hub just wouldn’t budge. We gave some time for the antirust agent to work and finally managed to get the propeller hub out with a puller. Only the cylinders remained in the engine block. We wanted to get them unfastened, too, to facilitate blasting their surfaces clean when separated. We were increasingly worried whether the pistons inside were rusted too tightly onto the walls for the cylinders to be taken loose. Well, we can at least give them a go, as they say, and that’s what we decided to do. We turned the nuts on the mounting pins open and tried if the pistons would budge. No go. We then poured white spirit into the cylinders through the plug holes, to see if it would squeeze between the pistons and cylinder walls, and mobilize the stuck pistons enough to detach the cylinders. So far, we haven’t succeeded in this, “but we shall never surrender” to quote Sir Winston Churchill. Photos by Lassi Karivalo except if otherwise mentioned. Translation by Matti Liuskallio. |
Avainsanat: aviation history, restoration, Tuesday Club, Hietanen HEA-23b, OH-XEA, "Ressu" |