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#1
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Hello
Im trying to figure out the Tach on our clubs Archer is screwing us. I just flew down to the Centenial of Flight FFA from Planville CT. Round trip with all diversions and ATC rerouts was 975nm. The tach said 12.4 hr. I never checked the Hobbs but I do know that for this plane the Tach usually runs faster than the hobbs on cross countries. Is this normal. I also did another flight previously at 65% power from Meriden MMK to Williamsburg W94 in 4.6 Tach time. My watch said 3.9. Also based on the 4.6 my fuel burn was only 8 GPH. Is there any text book way to check this. Our FBO seems to feel that calibrating the Tach is a big deal. I'm currently thinking of just replacing the Tach without tring to calibrate. Right now it looks to me as if we just replaced and engine at 1700 hr thinking it had 2000 hr. Thoughts ideas? |
#2
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On Sun, 21 Dec 2003 02:04:05 GMT, John Roncallo
wrote: Hello Im trying to figure out the Tach on our clubs Archer is screwing us. I just flew down to the Centenial of Flight FFA from Planville CT. Round trip with all diversions and ATC rerouts was 975nm. The tach said 12.4 hr. I never checked the Hobbs but I do know that for this plane the Tach usually runs faster than the hobbs on cross countries. Is this normal. I also did another flight previously at 65% power from Meriden MMK to Williamsburg W94 in 4.6 Tach time. My watch said 3.9. Also based on the 4.6 my fuel burn was only 8 GPH. Is there any text book way to check this. Our FBO seems to feel that calibrating the Tach is a big deal. I'm currently thinking of just replacing the Tach without tring to calibrate. Right now it looks to me as if we just replaced and engine at 1700 hr thinking it had 2000 hr. Thoughts ideas? Is the tach like the speedometer in a car? Flexible shaft turns an aluminum cup to run the needle, and a worm gear run by the shaft counts up the "hours"? If so, let's say you set the tach for 2500 rpm and mark the time. Ignore the gear reduction between the crankshaft and the tach. After the crankshaft has gone around 150,000 times, it is supposed to be one hour later. But your tach is telling you that it's actually 1.18 (4.6/3.9) hours later. Seems to me, that's the same as telling you that your crankshaft has made 177,000 revolutions. Eg. that your actual rpm was 2950. That's unlikely on an Archer, but an error in rpm is something you could check easily with a strobe and it probably ought to be your next step. Don |
#3
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The tach is GEARED to the engine crankshaft. At some nominal RPM the
tack will read one hour in one clock hour. If you run the engine at an excessive RPM then the tach will run fast. If you run at 60% power with a fixed pitch prop then the tach should read slower than a clock. The hobb's is a clock that is started and stopped by a engine oil pressure switch on most aircraft. Tach hours are really the number of crankshaft revolutions times a fixed scale factor which is the gear ratios from the crankshaft to the counter wheels. It sounds like you are running full throttle all the way since my tach always reads slower than the hobbs but then I have to pay for the maintenance so I take care of the engine. On Sun, 21 Dec 2003 02:04:05 GMT, John Roncallo wrote: Hello Im trying to figure out the Tach on our clubs Archer is screwing us. I just flew down to the Centenial of Flight FFA from Planville CT. Round trip with all diversions and ATC rerouts was 975nm. The tach said 12.4 hr. I never checked the Hobbs but I do know that for this plane the Tach usually runs faster than the hobbs on cross countries. Is this normal. I also did another flight previously at 65% power from Meriden MMK to Williamsburg W94 in 4.6 Tach time. My watch said 3.9. Also based on the 4.6 my fuel burn was only 8 GPH. Is there any text book way to check this. Our FBO seems to feel that calibrating the Tach is a big deal. I'm currently thinking of just replacing the Tach without tring to calibrate. Right now it looks to me as if we just replaced and engine at 1700 hr thinking it had 2000 hr. Thoughts ideas? |
#4
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The tach should almost always run slower than the Hobbs. The Hobbs is a
clock, but the tach is connected directly to the engine and should only click off one tach hour when the engine has turned 60 x max rpm. |
#5
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In article ,
C J Campbell wrote: The tach should almost always run slower than the Hobbs. The Hobbs is a clock, but the tach is connected directly to the engine and should only click off one tach hour when the engine has turned 60 x max rpm. But it's not "max rpm". In my Comanche (260hp IO-540, redline 2700RPM) it's 1:1 at 2300RPM. I think the "definition" of tach time is 1:1 at cruise. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#6
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In article ,
wrote: The hobb's is a clock that is started and stopped by a engine oil pressure switch on most aircraft. Some are connected to the battery Master switch. Hobbs starts when the Master is turned on, stops when it is turned off. |
#7
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![]() "Ben Jackson" wrote in message news:aJ8Fb.103545$8y1.318631@attbi_s52... | In article , | C J Campbell wrote: | The tach should almost always run slower than the Hobbs. The Hobbs is a | clock, but the tach is connected directly to the engine and should only | click off one tach hour when the engine has turned 60 x max rpm. | | But it's not "max rpm". In my Comanche (260hp IO-540, redline 2700RPM) | it's 1:1 at 2300RPM. I think the "definition" of tach time is 1:1 at | cruise. | That's right, he is talking about a Piper, there. |
#8
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... The tach should almost always run slower than the Hobbs. The Hobbs is a clock, but the tach is connected directly to the engine and should only click off one tach hour when the engine has turned 60 x max rpm. The ratio of turns to "tach time" isn't necessarily set on max rpm. |
#9
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![]() "EDR" wrote in message ... In article , wrote: The hobb's is a clock that is started and stopped by a engine oil pressure switch on most aircraft. Some are connected to the battery Master switch. Hobbs starts when the Master is turned on, stops when it is turned off. And on some retracts it's connected to the squat switch so that it only measures "flight time." This saves you on maintenance a bit. But the heart of the matter is that the hobbs is just an electrically driven hour meter. It has two terminals (hot and ground) and whenever voltage is present (from whatever source) it runs. On my plane it is a seperately fused line (not through the master bus) through the oil pressure switch. This for rentals cuts down on any clock shenanigans by running with the master off (so a lot of rentals have it this way). My favoritle rental was the 170 I used to fly that had the hobbs installed in where you could actually see the slide on contacts to it and pull it off if you were so inclined. |
#10
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In article , John Roncallo
writes: Is there any text book way to check this. Our FBO seems to feel that calibrating the Tach is a big deal. I'm currently thinking of just replacing the Tach without tring to calibrate. Right now it looks to me as if we just replaced and engine at 1700 hr thinking it had 2000 hr. I got a free program that uses the engine sound to give you RPM. I don't know the web site but the program says email is . Just take a laptop to the plane and check it out. Chuck |
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