Your right Sam, there is no lateral diagonal in the engine mount. I tried and tried but couldn't get a tube between the mag and the starter. No way. Vertical diags but no lateral. My bum legs don't want me stumbeling around out front so I probably will keep the starter.
The diagonal into station 2 on the left side is mid span, no cluster as you politely point out Sam. On the right side the comparable diagonal clusters with a square tube conventionally. As you say the station 2 verticals are working pretty hard. But I did a finite element analysis a year ago with many revisions to the cabane and verticals. As I see it the four longeron design with the cabanes and diagonals used, works because the X bracing in the center section helps the cabanes carry the asymetiric wing drag loads. The X up there is important, it didn't work with one diagonal leg of the X. It needed the whole X. None of this is of interest to straight plans builders. Stick to the drawings. While doing my computer thing, I did a finite element analysis of the XL and everything rang out just fine up front there.
Murray, I wonder about the impact of eliminating the tubes that tie the XL station 1 to the top longeron. This leaves the nose of the fuse with the full weight of the engine cantilevered with no direct connection with the cluster at the top of the forward cabane. Of course some aircraft do this, but this removes a major source of rigidity of the very light Eagle fuse. The reason the Eagles can be built out of light material is because of the strict use of triangulation in the design. Eliminate some of the geometry and tube sizes need to be increased to maintain rigidity. Now weight creep sets in.... all this takes me into an area far beyond my shadetree engineering abilities.

Also noticed the left side of the seat is anchored mid-span instead of a cluster. Landing loads can put a huge strain on that attachment, hope the tube doesn't bend.....
I'm afraid you are setting yourself up for a cracked engine mount. The 1/2 VW has a powerful rocking couple that will put some big lateral stress on the mount. With nothing to damp the lateral flexing, something will give. Take a look at conventional engine mounts, they all have diagonals to insure rigidity regardless of how the engine shakes, or to accommodate prop gyroscopic forces.
Please keep in mind I'm not trying to discourage your efforts, just pointing out some things I hope don't develop into problems. I know you trust the computer analysis, but changing traditional engineering practices puts you out there on the fringes of the envelope.
Man....you are definitely going experimental on us........hope you don't mind being a test pilot. Stay safe!
