Auteur Message
robert barthel ULM
MessagePosté le: Dim, 05 Avr 2015 21:46:14 +0000    Sujet du message: Diesel en Anglais

A tes souhaits ....

Mais sans oublier que j'aime beaucoup les Anglais sans malheureusement comprendre quoi que ce soit. mais il n'y a rien d'important
Ceci dit, je préfère les Anglaises, jolies, pulpeuses avec ce qu'il faut où il faut... Wink

Robert
pennec serge N°1 avion
MessagePosté le: Dim, 05 Avr 2015 18:32:05 +0000    Sujet du message: diesel

DieselAir Newsletter Subscriber Update



Diesel Trainer Market Booming in China

Posted by André Teissier duCros on 4 April, 2015



Stephen Pope, Flying Magazine, reports:
Diamond DA40 with Continental-Diesel 135HP. Source: Flying Magazine.

Training airplanes powered by fuel-efficient compression ignition diesel engines are catching on in a big way in China, where the burgeoning GA infrastructure favors jet-A fuel rather than 100LL avgas. In the latest move to diesel power, the Xinjiang Tianxiang Flight School in northwest China is doubling its fleet of Diamond DA40 trainers to 30 airplanes. They are powered by Continental’s CD-135 diesel, based on a Mercedes car engine. The expansion isn’t surprising considering that the school’s current diesel DA40s have been averaging an incredible 13 hours per day in the air – equating to more than 13,500 hours for the fleet in the last year. With a recommended TBO of 1,500 hours, engine replacement will be a key part of the school’s strategy. To gain knowledge about maintaining its Diamond fleet, the school’s mechanics recently visited Continental’s engine factory in Germany. The CD-135 four-cylinder turbodiesel engine produces 135 horsepower with similar performance to higher-horsepower naturally aspirated gasoline engines. Where the diesels really shine, of course, is in their fuel efficiency. Throttled back for long-range cruise, the CD-135 burns less than four gallons of jet-A per hour. Read more at http://www.flyingmag.com/news/diesel-trainer-market-booming-china#fZduJ0Zcybl35EVq.99
Comments: This indicates that the piston-engined plane market is finally taking off in China, and that, as expected, it will be a diesel market.
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