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#1
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I sent the following note to the Cardinal Flyers Online. I repeat it
here in case it may help somebody, or if anybody has advice! Here is an update on the problem I was having getting my Gamijectors tuned on my engine. As I posted in #3311 in September, I had done a lean test that indicated #2 was peaking at the lowest fuel flow and a spread of 0.7 gph. John-Paul at Gami said great, we’ll get you a leaner #2 and it was installed. Then the next lean test indicated that #2 had actually gotten a little worse, with a spread of 0.8 gph. There followed some discussion in digest #3314 with Paul and George Braly that suggested investigating #2 for other problems such as induction leak or cam lobe wear. Well, I finally got it into the shop on Friday. First thing the AME did was measure the intake valve lift. He compared #4 at 0.46 with #2 which was 0.25. So off came the cylinder and what do you know? The #2 lifter has failed in such a way as to make it pound against the cam lobe, which in turn is badly damaged. The camshaft is ruined and my engine goes to Progressive in Kamloops this week for teardown and repair. This may explain a lot. Cylinders 1 and 2 share the same damaged cam lobe for the intake values, so I believe both those cylinders have been producing less power. CHT on #1 and #2 have always been significantly less than #3 and #4; I assumed this was because they got more airflow. The engine has always run smoothly. This aircraft cruises at 130 knots or maybe slightly more. The previous owner thought this was normal, but it has concerned me ever since I started reading this digest and discovered most RG owners claim 140+ knots cruise, which of course is what the book says too. The flaps were badly out of rig, but fixing this made little difference. The other controls have been carefully re-rigged as well. Nothing has helped in a significant way. The only other thing that should cause this is a lack of power, but I always got full RPM and MP. Should have had the camshaft checked a long time ago... Cost to split the case and repair is C$6k (Canadian and US dollars are about equal at this time). An additional $1k gets a bottom overhaul accomplished, so this is a no-brainer. My engine is 750 hours and 13 years SMOH and this will zero the bottom end. I have a few decisions to make. First, should I get the Firewall Forward camshaft with built-in lubrication? Sounds like a good idea. While the engine is off this may be a good time to get the Firewall Forward Horsepower Plus STC. I’ve searched the digest and people seem to be pretty happy with it. My only concern is oil temperature – mine goes into the 220’s on a hot day (CHT’s are under 380.) The FF oil cooler STC was installed this summer which helped a little but not much. The Vernatherm also came off on Friday and there is some visible damage where it seats. This will be machined and fixed. However, I’m not sure I want to put the FF pistons in before I have solved the oil temperature problem. This is a bit of a conundrum. Any suggestions? One last thing. When the cam has been repaired should I continue to use the existing Gamijectors that are currently installed? They have been tuned for the engine in its slightly defective state. #1 and #2 may no longer be appropriate. randall g =%^) PPASEL+Night 1974 Cardinal RG http://www.telemark.net/randallg Lots of aerial photographs of British Columbia at: http://www.telemark.net/randallg/photos.htm Vancouver's famous Kat Kam: http://www.katkam.ca |
#2
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On the Gami's, call Gami and take their advice... I suspect they will
want to go back to the original starting set they sold you... On the lubed cam, it depends! The problem the lubed cam solves is the delay in splash lubrication right after starting when the engine has set for long enough for the cam to drain dry... That the lubed cam gets oil faster than an unlubed cam is good (very good) but whether it is worth the money is your call... The problem it does not solve is that the cam still rotates dry when cranking and after initial start until the oil pump can get flow up to the cam... The best of all worlds would be a lubed cam AND a preoiler to have the oil pressure up before cranking... bucks & pounds Now the cheap solution is to fly the airplane twice a week and use AVBLEND those who don't like avblend, or similar, can just hit delete and save us both aggravation Outfits like American Flyers use avblend AND run the engines 7 days a week and don't have major cam or wear problems.. cheers ... denny |
#3
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Oh yeah, and I will be tearing down my 1600 hour factory new
starboard engine for fresh cylinders next week... We will be inspecting the bottom end and I am holding my breath on the cam... If the cam is good we just hang the jugs.. If not I do the bottom and cough up another $7K... denny - roll them dice |
#4
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On Dec 10, 7:09 am, Denny wrote:
The problem the lubed cam solves is the delay in splash lubrication right after starting when the engine has set for long enough for the cam to drain dry... A better way out of this is to religiously preheat in cold weather. The cam won't ever drain completely dry. Rather the problem is that it takes quite a while for the replacement lubrication fog to develop in a cold engine/crankcase. Think of it this way - many of the the most critical parts of an engine are lubricated only by the fog. The design of the oil pump and relief valve system is such that the sump oil has little access to the heat of an engine if the oil is thick. As a result, the fog can be very slow to develop. Any high power without having the fog, & the cam can spall in a few seconds. It will never recover its surfaces from this. Pre oilers might help, but there is thermally a long way between a few oil splatters and a true oil fog. The problem really isn't the immediacy of oil pressure, it is the needed thinning so that oil is generously spraying around the crankcase vs being congealed. |
#5
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Further to my post in #3354 regarding my destroyed camshaft and oil
temperature problems, I have received some photos my mechanic took with his cell phone camera. These show the damaged camshaft lobe: http://www.telemark.net/randallg/stu...ngine/cam1.jpg http://www.telemark.net/randallg/stu...ngine/cam2.jpg http://www.telemark.net/randallg/stu...ngine/cam3.jpg These show where the vernatherm seats: http://www.telemark.net/randallg/stu...gine/vern1.jpg http://www.telemark.net/randallg/stu...gine/vern2.jpg randall g =%^) PPASEL+Night 1974 Cardinal RG http://www.telemark.net/randallg Lots of aerial photographs of British Columbia at: http://www.telemark.net/randallg/photos.htm Vancouver's famous Kat Kam: http://www.katkam.ca |
#6
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Hmmm, not good, kemo sabe....
Anyway, let us know what you decide on the fancy, schmancy cam... Remember, we have been flying since 1912 without this cam... Fly often, use avblend... denny |
#7
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![]() "randall g" wrote: Further to my post in #3354 regarding my destroyed camshaft and oil temperature problems, I have received some photos my mechanic took with his cell phone camera. Oof; that's ugly. What kind of oil did you use? -- Dan T-182T at BFM |
#8
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![]() "Denny" wrote: Fly often, use avblend... CamGuard http://www.aslcamguard.com/antiwear.htm http://www.aslcamguard.com/humiditycab.htm |
#9
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Slick50 is more widely available and do the same for your
engine.....NOTHING! "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "Denny" wrote: Fly often, use avblend... CamGuard http://www.aslcamguard.com/antiwear.htm http://www.aslcamguard.com/humiditycab.htm |
#10
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On Dec 12, 11:50 am, "Dan Luke" wrote:
"Denny" wrote: Fly often, use avblend... CamGuard http://www.aslcamguard.com/antiwear.htm http://www.aslcamguard.com/humiditycab.htm As the thread morphs: That's interesting, Dan... I would like to know what additive A and B are... I would also like to see the testing done by an unbiased source... There are also other factors in real engines: drainback resistance, anti rust, etc... I am wary of additive claims... I use 15W50... I only came to adding avblend kicking and screaming out of necessity... My port engine (500 smoh) suddenly developed signs of morning sickness, culminating in a stuck exhaust valve (during the flight to the mechanic for the annual, no less) This was quickly and smoothly solved in the usual fashion by an old timey mechanic - who has done many of these over 40+ years in the game - without having to take off the jug... About 3 months after that it began showing slight signs of morning sickness again (not necessarily the same valve)... I discussed this with the mechanic I had purchased the plane from... He laughed, and said they had fought with sticking valves for decades in their rental aircraft (especially the C-150's)... When they finally made the decision to try avblend (it is expensive, esp. when you are dumping it into a half dozen airplanes) it was only after much discussion and arguing... But, they never had a stuck valve on their planes after that... So, I sprung for a case of the stuff and I have not had a problem since... Anecdotal? Yes. But as one poster has on his sig, "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." denny |
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