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#1
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Hi
I had to pull cylinder 3 due to low compression. The shop said that there is some minute pitting on the valve which indicates that the EGT is too hot. I use an engine analyzer and run 50 rich of peak for leanest cylinder. This puts CHT's between 300 & 350 and EGT's between 1350 and 1450. I can't run the cylinders cooler than that and the EGT's tend to follow the CHT's. Does 1350 - 1450 sound too hot? If so where do I go from here? Tony -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Almost Instrument ![]() Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#2
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On Tue, 09 Mar 2004 05:33:57 GMT, tony roberts wrote:
Hi I had to pull cylinder 3 due to low compression. The shop said that there is some minute pitting on the valve which indicates that the EGT is too hot. I use an engine analyzer and run 50 rich of peak for leanest cylinder. This puts CHT's between 300 & 350 and EGT's between 1350 and 1450. I can't run the cylinders cooler than that and the EGT's tend to follow the CHT's. Does 1350 - 1450 sound too hot? If so where do I go from here? Tony Tony, If you look at a bunch of engine test data, 50°F ROP is about the worst place you can run a cylinder. CHT's are hottest; peak cylinder pressures are highest, etc. Whether the EGT itself is "too high" depends on the kind of valve in your engine. It's probably not too high for a Lycoming; but I don't know about Continentals. It also depends on the location of the EGT probe and how well that reflects the actual temperature at the valve. So far as "where to go", you have a few options. If you restrict your operations to less than 65% power, it probably doesn't matter where you run the engine. For higher power operations, you can either run richer or run on the lean side of peak EGT. The latter will give you cooler EGT's, CHT's and lower peak cylinder pressures as well as better fuel consumption (BSFC) figures. It may not be possible if your fuel flow is not evenly distributed to the cylinders. If that's the case, and your engine is fuel injected, you could opt for GAMI injectors. Or you could run richer -- 100°-125°F ROP. That would keep you out of the "danger zone", and also allow higher power operation. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
#3
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This is on a carbureted Lycoming 0-360 with one EGT/CGT guage (on
farthest back cylinder). I run 1350 EGT all the time (or as high as I can get if at altitutde and can't get that high). What is going on, is this. At high power setting, 75% or better, peak is 1450 or greater. So at high power I am running 100 (or more) rich of peak. As I go from 75% down to 55%, peak decreases to 1350. At 55%, 1350 IS peak, and that is safe, because the engine can't make enough heat at peak to burn the valves etc. I monitor CHT also, and if it goes above 400, I richen (and speed up) in order to cool. Hope that helps. |
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