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....why our Lycoming engines call for 12 (or 8) quarts of oil, when they blow
out anything over 8 (or 6) quarts? My old A&P, a real gray head with decades of aviation experience, mentioned the reason to me in conversation today. Here's the poop: When Lycoming was certifying these engines, they had to prove that they could operate them for "x" number of hours at full throttle. (The number bandied about was in the hundreds of hours, but no one knew for sure.) Lycoming was not allowed to add oil to the engine during this certification operation. Obviously, in order to run at such high power settings for so long, you're gonna need a lot of oil. Thus, the sump on my O-540 was designed to hold 12 quarts, while the sump on my old O-320 held 8 quarts. This ensured that they would pass the certification test. However, since they were certified with these over-sized oil sumps, that became the only way they could be built and sold. This despite the fact that anything over 8 and 6 quarts, respectively, ends up painting the belly of our planes in normal operation... So now you know...the *rest* of the story.... ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:1EWlb.10391$Fm2.7701@attbi_s04... When Lycoming was certifying these engines, they had to prove that they could operate them for "x" number of hours at full throttle. Bull****. Full throttle isn't a certification requirement. There are various endurance runs, none of which run even at maximum continuous power for the entire run. The aircraft certification requirements state the that oil capacity must be such as to provide the maximum consumption at required temperatures for the endurance of the AIRCRAFT that the engine is installed in. Any oversizing of the tank is hence to accomodate the range of uses Lycoming envisioned. So now you know...the *rest* of the story.... ;-) Nope. |
#3
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Jay Honeck wrote:
...why our Lycoming engines call for 12 (or 8) quarts of oil, when they blow out anything over 8 (or 6) quarts? I've got a 9 qt sump. If I fill it to nine, at the end of a short flight I'll have eight in the sump and one on the belly. If I see eight, I can expect that after about ten hours I'll have seven. My POH used to say something to the effect of: fill to 9 qt (or perhaps they just said full) for "extended" flight, which they defined as some small number of hours (2-4). This changed in the last revision to the POH, and no longer does Cessna apply any undue pressure to fill beyond 8 qt. I was shocked. Pleased, but shocked. The POH has always stated, do not operate the engine with less than four quarts in the sump. Now that's a pretty low standard to meet, since I generally won't fly it with less than seven quarts at takeoff. So I guess when I retire and ferry the airplane to Hawaii, I shouldn't really need a means to add oil while in flight. Just lots of gas. |
#4
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On our 172 N, it seems to make a difference what kind of flying we're doing.
Natural level is 5, if we fill to 6 and go on a long flight it will be fine. Fill to 6 and do a lot of touch and gos or short flights with a lot of take offs and the first quart will blow out. An extra quart or two on longer flights thus makes good sense. -- Roger Long |
#5
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Two comments:
1) I put a m-20 air/oil separator on my 540 - it does a great job reducing blowby and keeping the belly clean 2) On my 540 the dip stick has a gasket that fits into the top of the oil check neck. As the dipstick is inserted it pushes the oil down in the check tube, making the reading about a qt. low. If I remove the gasket and check, or check after a few hours I get an accurate reading on the amount of oil in the engine. So, if I fill to 8 qts, which is what my engine can hold, I'll actually have closer to 9 qts in the engine. Michael "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:1EWlb.10391$Fm2.7701@attbi_s04... ...why our Lycoming engines call for 12 (or 8) quarts of oil, when they blow out anything over 8 (or 6) quarts? My old A&P, a real gray head with decades of aviation experience, mentioned the reason to me in conversation today. Here's the poop: When Lycoming was certifying these engines, they had to prove that they could operate them for "x" number of hours at full throttle. (The number bandied about was in the hundreds of hours, but no one knew for sure.) Lycoming was not allowed to add oil to the engine during this certification operation. Obviously, in order to run at such high power settings for so long, you're gonna need a lot of oil. Thus, the sump on my O-540 was designed to hold 12 quarts, while the sump on my old O-320 held 8 quarts. This ensured that they would pass the certification test. However, since they were certified with these over-sized oil sumps, that became the only way they could be built and sold. This despite the fact that anything over 8 and 6 quarts, respectively, ends up painting the belly of our planes in normal operation... So now you know...the *rest* of the story.... ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#6
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In article ,
"Ron Natalie" wrote: Bull****. Full throttle isn't a certification requirement. There are various endurance runs, none of which run even at maximum continuous power for the entire run. The aircraft certification requirements state the that oil capacity must be such as to provide the maximum consumption at required temperatures for the endurance of the AIRCRAFT that the engine is installed in. Any oversizing of the tank is hence to accomodate the range of uses Lycoming envisioned. I believe there is a requirment that the engine must be able to operate at rated power within allowable temps with only 50% of the oil sump capacity. If so that might explain why sumps are seemingly "oversized". -- Dale L. Falk There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing around with airplanes. http://home.gci.net/~sncdfalk/flying.html |
#7
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Maybe it obvious to you, but why would you need a lot of oil to run high
power settings? Mike MU-2 "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:1EWlb.10391$Fm2.7701@attbi_s04... ...why our Lycoming engines call for 12 (or 8) quarts of oil, when they blow out anything over 8 (or 6) quarts? My old A&P, a real gray head with decades of aviation experience, mentioned the reason to me in conversation today. Here's the poop: When Lycoming was certifying these engines, they had to prove that they could operate them for "x" number of hours at full throttle. (The number bandied about was in the hundreds of hours, but no one knew for sure.) Lycoming was not allowed to add oil to the engine during this certification operation. Obviously, in order to run at such high power settings for so long, you're gonna need a lot of oil. Thus, the sump on my O-540 was designed to hold 12 quarts, while the sump on my old O-320 held 8 quarts. This ensured that they would pass the certification test. However, since they were certified with these over-sized oil sumps, that became the only way they could be built and sold. This despite the fact that anything over 8 and 6 quarts, respectively, ends up painting the belly of our planes in normal operation... So now you know...the *rest* of the story.... ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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![]() "Dale" wrote in message ... I believe there is a requirment that the engine must be able to operate at rated power within allowable temps with only 50% of the oil sump capacity. If so that might explain why sumps are seemingly "oversized". Bingo. 33.39 (a) The lubrication system of the engine must be designed and constructed so that it wil l function properly in all flight attitudes and atmospheric conditions in which the airplane is expected to operate. In wet sump engines, this requirement must be met when only one-half of the maximum lubricant supply is in the engine. |
#9
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: ...why our Lycoming engines call for 12 (or 8) quarts of oil, when they blow out anything over 8 (or 6) quarts? ..stuff snipped Jay, Our 0-320 seems happy with 7 on down. 8 to 7 occurs in about an hour or so. 7 to 6 (or 6 to 5 and so on) takes about 12 hours for each quart drop. The surprising thing is that they can run with 2!! Well, the manual says 2 is the minimum. Not sure I want to test it out. Good Luck, Mike __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
#10
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: Obviously, in order to run at such high power settings for so long, you're gonna need a lot of oil. Nonsense. At full throttle, they're gonna blow that oil right out in a few minutes. You could run my Lycoming for at least 250 hours straight if you started with 7 quarts, and none of it would be blown out. George Patterson You can dress a hog in a tuxedo, but he still wants to roll in the mud. |
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