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Old June 30th 04, 07:16 PM
Mike Rhodes
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On 29 Jun 2004 22:13:49 -0700, (John Clear) wrote:

In article ,
Mike Rhodes wrote:

As for Lycoming recommending against LOP, there was an article in
Flying magazine (p. 74-75, 7/02, inset article, J.Mac) , where there
was some sort of lead crystalline deposit (lead oxybromide) forming in
_turbo_ engines only in LOP operations.


I've snipped the rest since it is full of old wives tales. The
theory of lead oxybromide came from a poorly investigated accident
in Austrailia.

John Deakin analyzes the accident, and Flying's coverage of it.

Accident:
http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182152-1.html

Flying's coverage: http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182153-1.html

Deakin also covers LOP in alot of his articles, specifically the
ones titled 'Where should I run my engine?' He goes into the
science of how an engine actually works, and examines how the
'your engine will burn up if you do that' OWTs relate to reality.

All of Deakin's articles: http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182146-1.html

John


So I can ignore all the hysterics and lean to roughness, then enrichen
it to smoothness. And we all should do so in any piston engine, as
long as the power is markedly below 75%.

Mike