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The specs for my C-85 are upper plugs mag @ 28* BTDC and lower @ 30*BTDC.
My results are upper @ 30* BTDC and lower @ 32* BTDC. I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. Two separate readings confirmed my 30-32. TDC was identified and impulses unloaded before taking the readings. My question is whether my results are acceptable for a low speed , experimental or need to be readjusted?? If need to be redone, I'd appreciate a little on why, please. Thanks, Dick PS: If listening G, I think "highflyer"(?) gave me some mag advice during an "annual" a few years back which was appreciated. |
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In article IMJpk.70$482.47@trnddc06, "Dick"
wrote: The specs for my C-85 are upper plugs mag @ 28* BTDC and lower @ 30*BTDC. My results are upper @ 30* BTDC and lower @ 32* BTDC. I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. Two separate readings confirmed my 30-32. TDC was identified and impulses unloaded before taking the readings. My question is whether my results are acceptable for a low speed , experimental or need to be readjusted?? If need to be redone, I'd appreciate a little on why, please. Thanks, Dick PS: If listening G, I think "highflyer"(?) gave me some mag advice during an "annual" a few years back which was appreciated. Since you are probably using 100LL in an 80 octane engine, you are probably just going to get a little more than 85 HP, with no damage. -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
#3
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On Sat, 16 Aug 2008 23:54:16 GMT, "Dick" wrote:
The specs for my C-85 are upper plugs mag @ 28* BTDC and lower @ 30*BTDC. My results are upper @ 30* BTDC and lower @ 32* BTDC. I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. Two separate readings confirmed my 30-32. TDC was identified and impulses unloaded before taking the readings. My question is whether my results are acceptable for a low speed , experimental or need to be readjusted?? If need to be redone, I'd appreciate a little on why, please. not sure of the C-85 but on the O-200 there are cylinders out there made before a subtle design change was implemented that have a history of departing the engine on engines with advanced timing. my own engine has four of those early cylinders and so runs with timing a little retarded from what it could be. (as per the AD) if it need be done that may be why. Stealth Pilot |
#4
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On Aug 16, 5:54 pm, "Dick" wrote:
I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. There should be timing marks on the prop flange. They'll be on the bottom when the #1 cylinder is at TDC, and you line them up with the crankcase seam. Shouldn't need the other timing doodad, which isn't all that accurate. Dan |
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yes there are timing marks. Unfortunately I can't access the case seam due
to nosebowl and air plenum sheetmetal that I'd prefer not removing. So I guess my question still remains on difference between 30/32 and 28/30... Thanks anyway, Dick wrote in message ... On Aug 16, 5:54 pm, "Dick" wrote: I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. There should be timing marks on the prop flange. They'll be on the bottom when the #1 cylinder is at TDC, and you line them up with the crankcase seam. Shouldn't need the other timing doodad, which isn't all that accurate. Dan |
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Dick wrote:
yes there are timing marks. Unfortunately I can't access the case seam due to nosebowl and air plenum sheetmetal that I'd prefer not removing. So I guess my question still remains on difference between 30/32 and 28/30... Thanks anyway, Dick The correct answer as to why we like to maintain correct magneto timing in aviation is to prevent catastrophic engine failure such as loss of cylinders, holes burned through pistons, thrown rods and other negative consequences of detonation. Is this answer clear enough for you? Does it help that I'm an A&P? Why would you even bother to check the timing if you weren't going to do anything about it except wring your hands and beg other people to tell you it's OK? Do you go through the same agony when your oil's low, or your tire pressure's low? I can't believe that in the two days you've spent waffling over this, you couldn't find the time to loosen 4 nuts, rotate 2 mags, torque 4 nuts and make a logbook entry. -- John Kimmel I think it will be quiet around here now. So long. |
#7
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![]() "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() In article IMJpk.70$482.47@trnddc06, "Dick" wrote: The specs for my C-85 are upper plugs mag @ 28* BTDC and lower @ 30*BTDC. My results are upper @ 30* BTDC and lower @ 32* BTDC. I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. Two separate readings confirmed my 30-32. TDC was identified and impulses unloaded before taking the readings. My question is whether my results are acceptable for a low speed , experimental or need to be readjusted?? If need to be redone, I'd appreciate a little on why, please. Thanks, Dick PS: If listening G, I think "highflyer"(?) gave me some mag advice during an "annual" a few years back which was appreciated. Since you are probably using 100LL in an 80 octane engine, you are probably just going to get a little more than 85 HP, with no damage. -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. Please reconsider your response. Detonation is not the only concern. These old Continentals can built up of parts of unknown age, condition, and history. Even when new, these engines didn't handle high cylinder pressures very well. So even if the cylinder pressures are not high enough to cause detonation with 100LL, they can still be high enough to pull cylinder base studs out of the case, crack cylinder heads, hammer main bearings, and flex or distort crankcases over time. I'm not sure the OP's method for checking timing is accurate, but if his mag timing is in fact 2 degrees advanced, it should be reset to the values on the data plate. |
#8
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Thanks John but I was aware of the potential problems before you took the
time out to chew on me. Since you're wrong about "wringing my hands and begging for an okay", I don't consider your being an A&P any help at this time... However since most specs have a range of values, I am looking for that range. "John Kimmel" wrote in message ... Dick wrote: yes there are timing marks. Unfortunately I can't access the case seam due to nosebowl and air plenum sheetmetal that I'd prefer not removing. So I guess my question still remains on difference between 30/32 and 28/30... Thanks anyway, Dick The correct answer as to why we like to maintain correct magneto timing in aviation is to prevent catastrophic engine failure such as loss of cylinders, holes burned through pistons, thrown rods and other negative consequences of detonation. Is this answer clear enough for you? Does it help that I'm an A&P? Why would you even bother to check the timing if you weren't going to do anything about it except wring your hands and beg other people to tell you it's OK? Do you go through the same agony when your oil's low, or your tire pressure's low? I can't believe that in the two days you've spent waffling over this, you couldn't find the time to loosen 4 nuts, rotate 2 mags, torque 4 nuts and make a logbook entry. -- John Kimmel I think it will be quiet around here now. So long. |
#9
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Dale,
If OP means original poster, that is me. For the record, my timing is 2 deg more advanced but still BTDC by 32 deg. After an A&P rebuilt and installed my mags about 100 hours ago, I'm not sure if they were installed per the manual spec 30 deg or the 32 deg I found by test recently. A different A&P doesn't have a problem with it either way. I any case, I am just curious about any range established per "rule of thumb", experience or paracticality.. Thanks for taking the time to give your opinion. "Dale Scroggins" wrote in message ... "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() In article IMJpk.70$482.47@trnddc06, "Dick" wrote: The specs for my C-85 are upper plugs mag @ 28* BTDC and lower @ 30*BTDC. My results are upper @ 30* BTDC and lower @ 32* BTDC. I couldn't find a "flower pot" with attached degree wheel to borrow and attach to the prop hub so used a little "mickey mouse" circular protractor with a free swinging needle/pointer. Two separate readings confirmed my 30-32. TDC was identified and impulses unloaded before taking the readings. My question is whether my results are acceptable for a low speed , experimental or need to be readjusted?? If need to be redone, I'd appreciate a little on why, please. Thanks, Dick PS: If listening G, I think "highflyer"(?) gave me some mag advice during an "annual" a few years back which was appreciated. Since you are probably using 100LL in an 80 octane engine, you are probably just going to get a little more than 85 HP, with no damage. -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. Please reconsider your response. Detonation is not the only concern. These old Continentals can built up of parts of unknown age, condition, and history. Even when new, these engines didn't handle high cylinder pressures very well. So even if the cylinder pressures are not high enough to cause detonation with 100LL, they can still be high enough to pull cylinder base studs out of the case, crack cylinder heads, hammer main bearings, and flex or distort crankcases over time. I'm not sure the OP's method for checking timing is accurate, but if his mag timing is in fact 2 degrees advanced, it should be reset to the values on the data plate. |
#10
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![]() "Dick" wrote in message news:2c2qk.130$p72.75@trnddc05... Dale, If OP means original poster, that is me. For the record, my timing is 2 deg more advanced but still BTDC by 32 deg. After an A&P rebuilt and installed my mags about 100 hours ago, I'm not sure if they were installed per the manual spec 30 deg or the 32 deg I found by test recently. A different A&P doesn't have a problem with it either way. I any case, I am just curious about any range established per "rule of thumb", experience or paracticality.. Thanks for taking the time to give your opinion. snip I can't give you a rule of thumb. I can pass along an informed opinion developed over the last thirty years as aircraft mechanic, with several thousand hours of that spent working on small Continentals. 1. You shouldn't run your timing more advanced than specified. Two degrees is too much excess advance for your engine; 30 degrees advance is a lot of advance for an engine that turns about 2,000 rpm most of the time. Continental specified 30 degrees to get good performance at a cost in durability. When I set mag timing, I'm happy only when it's within 1/2 a degree. But I would worry if it were 1/2 a degree too much advance on a small Continental. If the mechanic who put the mag on set it right to begin with, then your points are wearing faster than the cam rubbing block, and the timing will continue to advance as you fly. And the e-gap, or internal mag timing, is drifting too. If the timing shifted 2 degrees in 100 hours, you have something wearing too fast. How, if you could not see the prop flange markings, did you establish TDC? Are you fully confident that the advance is 30 and 32 degrees? By the way, if you can see the flange markings from the top, but not the bottom, you could time the mags using a cylinder other than #1. The second A&P may have doubts about your methods. How did the first A&P set the timing; could he see the prop flange markings, or did he use a timing wheel? The wheels can be inaccurate if improperly set up or if the pointer friction is excessive. 2. How old are your cylinder heads? Not since overhaul, not since cylinder barrel replacement, but since the heads were new? Have they ever been welded? How old is your case? How many hours total time? Who did the overhaul, and what was the condition of the mating surfaces and bearing journals? Continental hasn't made a C85 in quite a number of years, and advancing the timing a couple of degrees, especially from a fairly advanced setting to begin with, will result in significantly higher cylinder pressures. Are all your engine parts up to that? The questions I asked above would be questions I would have in making the decision to reset the timing. But, in the end, I would probably use the time-rite or timing wheel and recheck the mag timing. If it had any excess advance I would reset the timing. If it had two degrees excess advance, I would pull off the point covers and look at the points. |
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