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News of January 18, 2009

DeltaHawk Engines Responds to ExxonMobil Aviation Announcement on Diesel Aircraft Engines

Racine, WI – 12/03/2008 -- DeltaHawk Engines, Inc. joins Diamond Aircraft (AVWebBiz November 26th) in responding to ExxonMobil Aviation’s position regarding use of jet fuel in piston powered diesel engines (Aero-News.Net Propwash November 24th). ExxonMobil is correct in stating that the FAA is working on this matter. Indeed, all three technical issues raised by ExxonMobil are already specifically included as analysis and test items during the diesel engine FAA Type Certification process. All three are readily-addressed issues for any diesel engine appropriately engineered for aviation use and being certified and distributed under current aviation safety standards. They will also be a part of the high altitude Technical Readiness Level (TRL) testing to be done with the DeltaHawk engine by the U.S. Navy.

Freezing Point.
Many jet fueled aircraft which do not fly at “speeds that cause heating of the fuel in the wing due to friction caused by airflow” have been operating safely for years. The Beech King Air aircraft is one example, along with the many turboprop conversions of piston aircraft. Even those aircraft which do fly at high Mach speeds may also have active fuel heating systems. The use of a fuel additive such as PRIST® Hi-Flash™ is also common. So, DeltaHawk-powered diesel aircraft will address this issue in the same way used by all aircraft today: published operating limitations plus fuel heating systems in specific aircraft installations to extend operating limits. The DeltaHawk diesel engine is ideally suited for use in such installations by virtue of our built-in heated fuel recirculation and engine liquid cooling systems.
Lubricity. Fuel lubricity is an issue only if you use the fuel as a lubricant for your fuel pumps. The DeltaHawk diesel engine fuel pump and injectors do not. All testing to date has been done with jet fuel, and the Type Certification test plan will document the engine’s ability to operate satisfactorily with worst case fuel lubricity. As evidence that lubricity is not an issue, Jet A has been used in airport ground support equipment diesel engines for many years with no problems. DeltaHawk plans to certify use of multiple fuels, and we anticipate that #1 road diesel will actually produce the worst case lubricity case due to its tighter sulfur specs.
Ignition Quality. The lack of a cetane specification in jet fuel is the one truly unique technical issue for jet fuel powered aircraft diesels. Difficult cold weather starting is the primary effect of extraordinarily low cetane on diesel engines, but once running, the engine will perform within normal engine limits. This is not a safety of flight issue. Further, DeltaHawk engines were specifically designed to handle low cetane levels, and the DeltaHawk FAA Type Certification program will test and document engine performance with worst case cetane fuel.
DeltaHawk CEO Diane Doers echoes Diamond CEO Peter Mauer’s AVWebBiz article sentiments and adds “We wonder what ‘extensive technical review’ could have been conducted by ExxonMobil without extensive technical discussions with either Diamond or DeltaHawk. It seems that broad generalizations have been relied upon, when specific dialogues could have provided reassurance that the issues were being appropriately addressed,” said Ms. Doers. “Diesel engines for aircraft bring significant benefits by reducing both usage of leaded fuel and total fuel consumption. They also will improve safety, especially in areas of the world where on spec 100LL is not available. In a time when bottom line costs and becoming ‘green’ are ever more important, DeltaHawk’s innovative engines are in demand worldwide for both general aviation and military applications. Diesel power will be an important contributor to a vibrant, cost-effective aviation industry. We look forward to working with ExxonMobil for the good of our mutual customers.”
DeltaHawk Engines, Inc., a Wisconsin corporation, is designing and building a family of direct drive liquid-cooled diesel cycle aviation engines from 100 to 650 hp. Four-cylinder engine models (160-200 hp) are in pre-production and higher horsepower models are in development. The engines are designed to use commercial jet fuels (Jet A, Jet A-1), military diesel fuels (JP-5, JP-8) or commercial diesel fuels (including biodiesel and synthetics). Type Certification of the first model is expected in 2009. DeltaHawk’s innovative light-weight fuel-efficient engines, providing turbine-like reliability at a fraction of the cost, will lead to a “green” future for general aviation. Contact: Diane E. Doers, CEO, tel: +1-262-634-9660, ddoers@deltahawkengines.com www.deltahawkengines.com

posted at 12:25 AM

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Mission Statement

Every month: news, facts, and comments on the coming revolution for piston-engines aircrafts between 130 and 400 HP: Retrofitting a diesel engine to run on Jetfuel or Kerosene, reduce Gallons/Hour by some 30%, eliminate ignition systems (magnetos, spark plugs) and their problems, eliminate mixture control, increase TBO to 2,400-3,000 hours, increase performance between 6,000 and 12,500 ft., and drastically reduce Operating Costs.

The letter is intended for piston engines aircraft owners, manufacturers, fleet operators and FBOs, re-manufacturers of engines for these aircrafts, manufacturers of engine components and ancillaries, and all professionals acting in decisions of engine exchange or refitting at TBO, in North and South America, Pacific Rim, African continent, and all parts of the world were Avgas, Mogas, Kerosene and Jetfuel are available.

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