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#1
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Our JPI EDM-700 engine analyzer may have paid for itself today.
Here's the scenario: Mary is PIC. During her run-up, the left mag dropped a bit more than the right. She leaned it back (the usual fouled-plug procedure) and it smoothed out to within specs. Still not as smooth at the right, but with less than a 75 rpm drop. Climb out was normal, with that O-540 pulling like a tractor at over 1000 feet per minute. Life was good, especially after surviving the Wisconsin-versus-Iowa Big Ten football game... Upon leveling out, and getting everything cleaned up, I was messing around with our new CO detector, which is mounted on the pilot's-side at elbow height. (Recommendation: Don't reach across your pilot like this unless you're married to her! :-) As I was tinkering with it, my eyes were drawn to the EDM-700, which was clearly showing something amiss with the #2 cylinder. EGT was over 1630 degrees (we try to keep them under 1500), and the CHT was way low -- like in the low 200s. We tried leaning, and enrichening, and different throttle settings, but that cylinder stayed way out of line with all the others. Strangely, nothing sounded amiss at all, and the engine seemed to be performing normally. I was about to suspect something wrong with the JPI, when I suggested that we try switching to one mag, then the other, in flight. On the right mag, all was well -- but on the left mag, the engine started shaking, and the #2 EGT shot off the scale! Switching back to "both" everything smoothed out. In fact, we still could not detect anything amiss "by ear" -- but the #2 cylinder was still "out of whack" with the others. Since we were closer to our destination than home, we elected to continue on and land. On the ramp Mary did a run-up, and the #2 cylinder was still clearly not firing on the left mag. We then ran it up on "both", and leaned it severely -- again, the usual procedure for a fouled plug. After this it was better, but not perfect -- so we de-cowled the engine, and checked everything thoroughly. Other than the #2 cylinder's bottom spark plug wire being oily (actually, all the bottom wires are), I couldn't find anything amiss. I wiggled all the wires, made sure they were not bent over too sharply, checked all connections at the mags -- and then went to dinner. Of course, this bothered me throughout dinner, and I really couldn't enjoy myself. On the return flight, with me acting as PIC, I did a VERY thorough run-up, with a long, brutally leaned 2000 RPM test. Everything tested and ran fine -- and remained fine all the way home, at all throttle, prop and mixture settings. What's going on here? We burn unleaded car gas, so it seems unlikely that we had a lead-fouled spark plug (we haven't bought avgas in several weeks) -- could it be a bad plug? Or a bad spark plug wire? Can a mag fail in such a way as to only hinder a single spark plug from firing? I'm going to call my A&P tomorrow to have him check it over, but anyone got any ideas? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:cI9od.66570$V41.11973@attbi_s52... Our JPI EDM-700 engine analyzer may have paid for itself today. Here's the scenario: Mary is PIC. During her run-up, the left mag dropped a bit more than the right. She leaned it back (the usual fouled-plug procedure) and it smoothed out to within specs. Still not as smooth at the right, but with less than a 75 rpm drop. Climb out was normal, with that O-540 pulling like a tractor at over 1000 feet per minute. Life was good, especially after surviving the Wisconsin-versus-Iowa Big Ten football game... Upon leveling out, and getting everything cleaned up, I was messing around with our new CO detector, which is mounted on the pilot's-side at elbow height. (Recommendation: Don't reach across your pilot like this unless you're married to her! :-) As I was tinkering with it, my eyes were drawn to the EDM-700, which was clearly showing something amiss with the #2 cylinder. EGT was over 1630 degrees (we try to keep them under 1500), and the CHT was way low -- like in the low 200s. We tried leaning, and enrichening, and different throttle settings, but that cylinder stayed way out of line with all the others. Strangely, nothing sounded amiss at all, and the engine seemed to be performing normally. I was about to suspect something wrong with the JPI, when I suggested that we try switching to one mag, then the other, in flight. On the right mag, all was well -- but on the left mag, the engine started shaking, and the #2 EGT shot off the scale! Switching back to "both" everything smoothed out. In fact, we still could not detect anything amiss "by ear" -- but the #2 cylinder was still "out of whack" with the others. Since we were closer to our destination than home, we elected to continue on and land. On the ramp Mary did a run-up, and the #2 cylinder was still clearly not firing on the left mag. We then ran it up on "both", and leaned it severely -- again, the usual procedure for a fouled plug. After this it was better, but not perfect -- so we de-cowled the engine, and checked everything thoroughly. Other than the #2 cylinder's bottom spark plug wire being oily (actually, all the bottom wires are), I couldn't find anything amiss. I wiggled all the wires, made sure they were not bent over too sharply, checked all connections at the mags -- and then went to dinner. Of course, this bothered me throughout dinner, and I really couldn't enjoy myself. On the return flight, with me acting as PIC, I did a VERY thorough run-up, with a long, brutally leaned 2000 RPM test. Everything tested and ran fine -- and remained fine all the way home, at all throttle, prop and mixture settings. What's going on here? We burn unleaded car gas, so it seems unlikely that we had a lead-fouled spark plug (we haven't bought avgas in several weeks) -- could it be a bad plug? Or a bad spark plug wire? Can a mag fail in such a way as to only hinder a single spark plug from firing? I'm going to call my A&P tomorrow to have him check it over, but anyone got any ideas? I would guess you have a bad plug. Something similar happened to me when landing at Everglades City in Fl. Putting on some power to turn and back track, the engine started running rough. I went through the leaning process on the ramp and found the problem went away when running on only one set of mags. As it was a rental plane, an engineer came down from Naples and in 5 mins determined that it was a bad plug just using that chalk that changes colour when it gets hot. He isolated the problem, changed the plug and the problem disappeared. Mind you flying the plane back to Naples had me listening out for every single sound. Glad I managed to spot the landing and not need to go around. Chris |
#3
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Our JPI EDM-700 engine analyzer may have paid for itself today. Here's the scenario: Mary is PIC. During her run-up, the left mag dropped a bit more than the right. She leaned it back (the usual fouled-plug procedure) and it smoothed out to within specs. Still not as smooth at the right, but with less than a 75 rpm drop. Climb out was normal, with that O-540 pulling like a tractor at over 1000 feet per minute. Life was good, especially after surviving the Wisconsin-versus-Iowa Big Ten football game... Upon leveling out, and getting everything cleaned up, I was messing around with our new CO detector, which is mounted on the pilot's-side at elbow height. (Recommendation: Don't reach across your pilot like this unless you're married to her! :-) As I was tinkering with it, my eyes were drawn to the EDM-700, which was clearly showing something amiss with the #2 cylinder. EGT was over 1630 degrees (we try to keep them under 1500), and the CHT was way low -- like in the low 200s. We tried leaning, and enrichening, and different throttle settings, but that cylinder stayed way out of line with all the others. Strangely, nothing sounded amiss at all, and the engine seemed to be performing normally. I was about to suspect something wrong with the JPI, when I suggested that we try switching to one mag, then the other, in flight. On the right mag, all was well -- but on the left mag, the engine started shaking, and the #2 EGT shot off the scale! Switching back to "both" everything smoothed out. In fact, we still could not detect anything amiss "by ear" -- but the #2 cylinder was still "out of whack" with the others. Since we were closer to our destination than home, we elected to continue on and land. On the ramp Mary did a run-up, and the #2 cylinder was still clearly not firing on the left mag. We then ran it up on "both", and leaned it severely -- again, the usual procedure for a fouled plug. After this it was better, but not perfect -- so we de-cowled the engine, and checked everything thoroughly. Other than the #2 cylinder's bottom spark plug wire being oily (actually, all the bottom wires are), I couldn't find anything amiss. I wiggled all the wires, made sure they were not bent over too sharply, checked all connections at the mags -- and then went to dinner. Of course, this bothered me throughout dinner, and I really couldn't enjoy myself. On the return flight, with me acting as PIC, I did a VERY thorough run-up, with a long, brutally leaned 2000 RPM test. Everything tested and ran fine -- and remained fine all the way home, at all throttle, prop and mixture settings. What's going on here? We burn unleaded car gas, so it seems unlikely that we had a lead-fouled spark plug (we haven't bought avgas in several weeks) -- could it be a bad plug? Or a bad spark plug wire? Can a mag fail in such a way as to only hinder a single spark plug from firing? I'm going to call my A&P tomorrow to have him check it over, but anyone got any ideas? I'm guessing your airplane is female and just doesn't like your wife being PIC. :-) Matt |
#4
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Hi Jay
High EGT an low CHT one cylinder: Fouled plug, Burned valve, Broken ring, Bad mag wire That's according to the trouble shooting guidwe for my EI engine analyzer. HTH Tony -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#5
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What Tony said.
Have you downloaded the data yet? |
#6
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![]() "tony roberts" wrote in message news:nospam-ABD905.16523021112004@shawnews... Hi Jay High EGT an low CHT one cylinder: Fouled plug, Burned valve, Broken ring, Bad mag wire That's according to the trouble shooting guidwe for my EI engine analyzer. Not likely to be the valve or the ring since it performed differently on one mag than the other. I would suggest swapping the plugs and noting whether the problem moved to the other mag or not. Testing the wires is an easy quick test with an HV tester...when I recently had a similar problem it turned out to be a spark plug wire. Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
#7
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Okay, after looking at all the replies, you need to stop and analyze
the info given to you on the instrument. If there was a bad plug, when he switched mags, (he should have leaned it out), the temps would drop because there was no fire. Same with any other ignition part. If there was no fuel getting to the chamber, same thing. What you're seeing is a bad valve, probably exhaust. Go do another run up and on each mag lean the **** out of it until it's just about running smooth as it can be with the **** leaned out of it, then watch the engine instrument. If the temps drop out of a certain cylinder on a certain mag, you have a plug (or ignition) problem. That'll be the first test. If that doesn't happen, take her back and check compression on the cylinder. Keep us posted. On Sun, 21 Nov 2004 23:40:56 GMT, "Jay Honeck" wrote: Our JPI EDM-700 engine analyzer may have paid for itself today. Here's the scenario: Mary is PIC. During her run-up, the left mag dropped a bit more than the right. She leaned it back (the usual fouled-plug procedure) and it smoothed out to within specs. Still not as smooth at the right, but with less than a 75 rpm drop. Climb out was normal, with that O-540 pulling like a tractor at over 1000 feet per minute. Life was good, especially after surviving the Wisconsin-versus-Iowa Big Ten football game... Upon leveling out, and getting everything cleaned up, I was messing around with our new CO detector, which is mounted on the pilot's-side at elbow height. (Recommendation: Don't reach across your pilot like this unless you're married to her! :-) As I was tinkering with it, my eyes were drawn to the EDM-700, which was clearly showing something amiss with the #2 cylinder. EGT was over 1630 degrees (we try to keep them under 1500), and the CHT was way low -- like in the low 200s. We tried leaning, and enrichening, and different throttle settings, but that cylinder stayed way out of line with all the others. Strangely, nothing sounded amiss at all, and the engine seemed to be performing normally. I was about to suspect something wrong with the JPI, when I suggested that we try switching to one mag, then the other, in flight. On the right mag, all was well -- but on the left mag, the engine started shaking, and the #2 EGT shot off the scale! Switching back to "both" everything smoothed out. In fact, we still could not detect anything amiss "by ear" -- but the #2 cylinder was still "out of whack" with the others. Since we were closer to our destination than home, we elected to continue on and land. On the ramp Mary did a run-up, and the #2 cylinder was still clearly not firing on the left mag. We then ran it up on "both", and leaned it severely -- again, the usual procedure for a fouled plug. After this it was better, but not perfect -- so we de-cowled the engine, and checked everything thoroughly. Other than the #2 cylinder's bottom spark plug wire being oily (actually, all the bottom wires are), I couldn't find anything amiss. I wiggled all the wires, made sure they were not bent over too sharply, checked all connections at the mags -- and then went to dinner. Of course, this bothered me throughout dinner, and I really couldn't enjoy myself. On the return flight, with me acting as PIC, I did a VERY thorough run-up, with a long, brutally leaned 2000 RPM test. Everything tested and ran fine -- and remained fine all the way home, at all throttle, prop and mixture settings. What's going on here? We burn unleaded car gas, so it seems unlikely that we had a lead-fouled spark plug (we haven't bought avgas in several weeks) -- could it be a bad plug? Or a bad spark plug wire? Can a mag fail in such a way as to only hinder a single spark plug from firing? I'm going to call my A&P tomorrow to have him check it over, but anyone got any ideas? |
#8
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Okay, after looking at all the replies, you need to stop and analyze
the info given to you on the instrument. If there was a bad plug, when he switched mags, (he should have leaned it out), the temps would drop because there was no fire. Same with any other ignition part. If there was no fuel getting to the chamber, same thing. What you're seeing is a bad valve, probably exhaust. How could a bad valve on #2 work okay on "both" mags -- but not on the left mag? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#9
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With apologees for hijacking...
I have the opposite problem, high CHT with normal EGT. Strangely enough, its also my #2 cylinder. I was thinking it was a fuel injection problem. |
#10
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![]() "Dude" wrote in message ... With apologees for hijacking... I have the opposite problem, high CHT with normal EGT. Strangely enough, its also my #2 cylinder. I was thinking it was a fuel injection problem. The problem I had with a spark plug wire a couple' months ago was on my # 2 cylinder also! |
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