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I thought I understood the fuel injection process, but now I'm not so
sure. When you cold start an IO-360, you are supposed to run the auxiliary fuel pump with the mixture control knob pushed in until you see a rise in fuel pressure, then shut off the pump and pull the mixture contol knob back to shut off, and start the engine, pushing the mixture to full rich when the engine starts. How does the mixture control shut off the fuel? What does it control? If the mixture is at idle cutoff, why does the engine start? Another question, why do you start the engine with the mixture at idle cutoff anyway? Why not start with the mixture at full rich? Thanks, Corky Scott |
#2
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In article ,
wrote: I thought I understood the fuel injection process, but now I'm not so sure. When you cold start an IO-360, you are supposed to run the auxiliary fuel pump with the mixture control knob pushed in until you see a rise in fuel pressure, then shut off the pump and pull the mixture contol knob back to shut off, and start the engine, pushing the mixture to full rich when the engine starts. Is it a Lycoming? Some have another system. How does the mixture control shut off the fuel? What does it control? If the mixture is at idle cutoff, why does the engine start? Throttle controls air (air box, throttle plate), mixture controls fuel (needle valve, spider injector controller). Because excess fuel has been injected into the engine; enough to start and run fro a few seconds, until the mixture lever is advanced, allowing fuel to flow, propelled by the engine driven pump. Another question, why do you start the engine with the mixture at idle cutoff anyway? Why not start with the mixture at full rich? Because the engine driven pump would flood the cylinder, creating too rich a mixture. |
#3
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Corky, cold starting the Lycoming IO-360 in my plane (1967 Beech
Musketeer) calls for mixture full rich. The boost pump is only operated momentarily to assure that it's in working order. So I'm guessing you have a Continental? In any case, by running the pump until you have pressure squirts quite a bit of fuel into the intakes just before the intake valves. In effect flooding the engine. For most all engines, carbureted or injected, flooded starts require mixture at cutoff. So now you crank until the engine lights off on the fuel that is now in the intakes. Once running, enrichen the mixture to keep it running. This is one way to start an injected engine without a separate primer. Very primative compared to modern auto engines. But That's what we have to deal with to get into the air! Best regards, Steve Robertson N4732J wrote: I thought I understood the fuel injection process, but now I'm not so sure. When you cold start an IO-360, you are supposed to run the auxiliary fuel pump with the mixture control knob pushed in until you see a rise in fuel pressure, then shut off the pump and pull the mixture contol knob back to shut off, and start the engine, pushing the mixture to full rich when the engine starts. How does the mixture control shut off the fuel? What does it control? If the mixture is at idle cutoff, why does the engine start? Another question, why do you start the engine with the mixture at idle cutoff anyway? Why not start with the mixture at full rich? Thanks, Corky Scott |
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On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 14:47:15 -0400, Steve Robertson
wrote: Corky, cold starting the Lycoming IO-360 in my plane (1967 Beech Musketeer) calls for mixture full rich. The boost pump is only operated momentarily to assure that it's in working order. So I'm guessing you have a Continental? In any case, by running the pump until you have pressure squirts quite a bit of fuel into the intakes just before the intake valves. In effect flooding the engine. For most all engines, carbureted or injected, flooded starts require mixture at cutoff. So now you crank until the engine lights off on the fuel that is now in the intakes. Once running, enrichen the mixture to keep it running. This is one way to start an injected engine without a separate primer. Very primative compared to modern auto engines. But That's what we have to deal with to get into the air! Best regards, Steve Robertson Sorry I did not make it clear, we are talking about the Lycoming IO-360 that is used in the latest Cessna 172's. The POH is very specific about cold starting: The auxiliary fuel pump should be turned on and the mixture control pushed in until you see a rise in the fuel pressure, then the pump is shut off and the mixture control returned to idle cuttoff. The POH states that if the engine is hot, the auxiliary fuel pump is NOT to be used. Consequently, hot starts are extremely problematic and I can see why: you are trying to start an engine that was shut down by pulling the mixture control to idle cuttoff, which starves the engine for fuel, then trying to restart it with the mixture control in exactly the same position. Where does the engine get it's fuel to run under those circumstances? Some people suggest that the POH should be ignored and the fuel lines primed as per cold starts. I'm just asking. I'm always ecstatic when I find that the engine is cold because I know it will start right up using the cold engine start procedure. Hot starts.... Corky Scott |
#5
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Here is how I start up a Cessna 172-S (IO-360 180HP):
Cold start (oil temp below green arc): Master on, Trottle foward, mixture foward, fuel pump for 3 sec (look for rise in fuel flow indicator), throttle to 1/4 inch (about 1000 RPM), Ignition Warm start (Oil temp in the green arc): Master on, Throttle foward, mixture foward, fuel pump for 1 sec., mixture back to cut-off, Ignition. When engine fires, smoothly but quickly retard the throttle to about the 1000 RPM range, and quickly follow with mixture to full rich. Hot start (Oil temp in green arc and engine shut down within last 30 minutes): Master on, Throttle foward, mixture foward, mixture back to cut-off, Ignition. When engine fires, smoothly but quickly retard the throttle to about the 1000 RPM range, and quickly follow with mixture to full rich. I've heard debate on starting the engine with full throttle (make sure you are firmly on the brakes!). The "Warm start" is a good compromise between the cold and hot start, and the one I use most often. Sorry I did not make it clear, we are talking about the Lycoming IO-360 that is used in the latest Cessna 172's. The POH is very specific about cold starting: The auxiliary fuel pump should be turned on and the mixture control pushed in until you see a rise in the fuel pressure, then the pump is shut off and the mixture control returned to idle cuttoff. The POH states that if the engine is hot, the auxiliary fuel pump is NOT to be used. Consequently, hot starts are extremely problematic and I can see why: you are trying to start an engine that was shut down by pulling the mixture control to idle cuttoff, which starves the engine for fuel, then trying to restart it with the mixture control in exactly the same position. Where does the engine get it's fuel to run under those circumstances? Some people suggest that the POH should be ignored and the fuel lines primed as per cold starts. I'm just asking. I'm always ecstatic when I find that the engine is cold because I know it will start right up using the cold engine start procedure. Hot starts.... Corky Scott |
#6
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In article ,
wrote: When you cold start an IO-360, you are supposed to run the auxiliary fuel pump with the mixture control knob pushed in until you see a rise in fuel pressure, then shut off the pump and pull the mixture contol knob back to shut off, and start the engine, pushing the mixture to full rich when the engine starts. I get more reliable starts by moving the mixture to idle cutoff before turning off the pump. That seems to preload the fuel pressure so that when it catches there's fuel available. Also it takes a moment (or longer if it's cold) for the fuel you just squirted in to vaporize, so wait a few seconds before cranking. Now that I've had a lot of practice (IO-540) I don't even push the mixture full rich on start. I just push it in an inch or so to the position where I run it on the ground. It's so lean that it stumbles above about 1500 RPM. For hot starts I use the procedure someone else explained. No priming with the fuel pump, just full throttle and mixture at idle cutoff, then crank until it starts and quickly (I keep my pinky and ring finger over the ball of the throttle and my thumb on the mixture -- crazy Comanche knob order) pull the throttle and advance the mixture. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#7
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"Brian C." wrote in
: Here is how I start up a Cessna 172-S (IO-360 180HP): Cold start (oil temp below green arc): Master on, Trottle foward, mixture foward, fuel pump for 3 sec (look for rise in fuel flow indicator), throttle to 1/4 inch (about 1000 RPM), Ignition Warm start (Oil temp in the green arc): Master on, Throttle foward, mixture foward, fuel pump for 1 sec., mixture back to cut-off, Ignition. When engine fires, smoothly but quickly retard the throttle to about the 1000 RPM range, and quickly follow with mixture to full rich. Hot start (Oil temp in green arc and engine shut down within last 30 minutes): Master on, Throttle foward, mixture foward, mixture back to cut-off, Why mixture forward followed by mixture back to cutoff? |
#8
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On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 13:04:33 GMT, EDR wrote:
Throttle controls air (air box, throttle plate), mixture controls fuel (needle valve, spider injector controller). Because excess fuel has been injected into the engine; enough to start and run fro a few seconds, until the mixture lever is advanced, allowing fuel to flow, propelled by the engine driven pump. Thanks for the explanation EDR. My question then is: If the engine is shut down by pulling the mixture control to idle/cutoff, where does the engine get the fuel it needs to start again when you attempt a hot start 15 minutes later? You aren't supposed to use the auxiliary fuel pump and the mixture is supposed to remain at idle/cutoff during the start in this situation. Throttle is supposed to be advanced 1/4", but since the mixture control is closed and the engine had stopped for lack of fuel, where is the gas coming from to start the engine? Thanks, Corky Scott |
#9
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FWIW, the cold start procedures in your POH differ from the procedure in mine.
However, it sounds like the hot start procedures are the same. As to your question about where the engine gets its fuel to hot start ... Even though you killed the engine with the mixture control, a bit of fuel will still leak out of the injector lines and into the intake after the engine is shut down. That is usually *more* than enough to start and run the engine for a few seconds. In fact it's enough fuel that the engine will flood if it's hot and the mixture is set rich. Hot starts on FI engines are problematic. On mine, I almost always (but not always) get it to light off and run using the POH procedures (throttle at fast idle, mixture cut off, no boost pump, crank until start, enrichen mixture). However, some of my Musketeer bretheren with the same Lyc. IO-360 have better luck with intentionally flooding the hot engine using the boost pump and mixture control before starting. Then they use the procedure for a flooded engine. I have once or twice resorted to this when I couldn't get a hot start with the normal POH procedure. Also FWIW, I really don't like fuel injection on airplane engines. Sure it's great not to have to worry about carb heat. But instead I worry about hot starts and plugged injectors. As far as the "advantage" of quicker throttle response for FI, I say big deal. Your supposed to throttle up gently on all engines, so I just don't see FI as an advantage here. Still, the Lyc IO-360 seems to be a pretty good engine and it and I have come to an understanding about hot starts. Best regards, Steve Robertson N4732J 1967 Musketeer Super III wrote: The POH is very specific about cold starting: The auxiliary fuel pump should be turned on and the mixture control pushed in until you see a rise in the fuel pressure, then the pump is shut off and the mixture control returned to idle cuttoff. The POH states that if the engine is hot, the auxiliary fuel pump is NOT to be used. Consequently, hot starts are extremely problematic and I can see why: you are trying to start an engine that was shut down by pulling the mixture control to idle cuttoff, which starves the engine for fuel, then trying to restart it with the mixture control in exactly the same position. Where does the engine get it's fuel to run under those circumstances? Some people suggest that the POH should be ignored and the fuel lines primed as per cold starts. I'm just asking. I'm always ecstatic when I find that the engine is cold because I know it will start right up using the cold engine start procedure. Hot starts.... Corky Scott |
#10
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On Tue, 22 Jun 2004 08:56:08 -0400, Steve Robertson
wrote: Also FWIW, I really don't like fuel injection on airplane engines. Sure it's great not to have to worry about carb heat. But instead I worry about hot starts and plugged injectors. As far as the "advantage" of quicker throttle response for FI, I say big deal. Your supposed to throttle up gently on all engines, so I just don't see FI as an advantage here. Still, the Lyc IO-360 seems to be a pretty good engine and it and I have come to an understanding about hot starts. I doubt that the throttle response from carburator to fuel injection would be discernable. Carburators have a system called the accelerator pump which literally injects fuel directly into the venturi when the throttle is snapped open. It's a one time shot to prevent stumble when you stamp on the accelerator pedal. After that, the full throttle fuel enrichment system takes over, as long as you are demanding full throttle, or above normal throttle. Fuel injection, the type that has individual injectors for each cylinder, can't do that. The amount of fuel injected has to respond according to how it's been designed to operate. In todays cars, the injectors are designed to be able to inject the proper amount of fuel according to a number of parameters and sensors, all controlled by a computer. But unless you're flying behind a FADEC system, the fuel injection systems for Lycoming and Continental are not that sophisticated. With the non computer controlled injection systems being used in aviation right now, the only advantage you get over carburators is not much worry about carb ice and somewhat better fuel distribution per cylinder which may permit you to use mixture settings on the lean side of peak. Hot starting is not one of the advantages. Getting a much better fuel burn is not really going to happen until computers get involved with controlling the injectors. When you consider that most of the life of the engine is spent cruising at the leanest safe settings, both carburated engines and fuel injected engines end up being fairly close together in fuel burn because both are optimized for that operation. That's as I understand things. I did not know that Lycoming counted on a certain amount of post engine shut down bleed through from the injectors to allow a hot non primed restart. With a carburator, hot starts are (or should be) non events as the moment the engine is turning it's sucking fuel from the carburator. Corky Scott |
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