O. Sami Saydjari wrote:
In reading a booked called "Design for Safety", by David Thurston, he
advises owners to "turn the propeller over by hand three or four times
during preflight if the airplane has been standing for half a day or
longer." [p169]
His rationale is as follows. "When an engine has been standing for
awhile and has not been pulled through by hand prior to starting, an
accident could result if fuel or oil has collected in the cylinders.
When the engine fires, trapped fluids can cause bent piston rods,
cracked cylinders, or a damaged crankshaft. Althouogh such accidents
might not cause bodily injury, they surely can harm one's budget and can
beavoided by proper preflight procedures. It is also possible for
damage of this type to remain hidden until something fails in flight"
[pp 147-148].
Sounds like the author has been flying with radial engines.
I am quite surprised that this is the first I have heard such advice.
What do folks on this newsgroup think of that advice?
Not necessary if you're flying behind a flat engine. Someone else will have to
speak for radials.
Does anyone out there do this routinely?
If so, what is the proper procedure? Do you just turn the prop slowly
in the direction the prop normally turns?
Could fuel actually collect in the cylinders as suggested? Why would
the fuel not just evaporate?
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Dave
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