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#1
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Is anyone in this group interested in or experimenting with Lean of Peak
operation? I'm especially interested in the experience of anyone doing it with a fixed pitch carb engine with single EGT and CHT probes. -- Roger Long |
#2
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On Wed, 14 Apr 2004 19:15:21 GMT, "Roger Long"
om wrote: Is anyone in this group interested in or experimenting with Lean of Peak operation? I'm especially interested in the experience of anyone doing it with a fixed pitch carb engine with single EGT and CHT probes. -- Roger Long I am Roger, but I've got a ways to go yet before I'll be able to try it. I'll be using a Ford V6, and I'm just now getting ready to fabricate the headers. I'll be drilling each exhaust tube for an EGT probe and hope to scrounge the money to get one of the multi cylinder types. Then I have to run the engine for an extended period while documenting the tests so that the DAR who looks things over will at least be able to see that the engine was run at flight power settings for extended periods. During the runs, I'll be seeing if I can bring the mixture to lean of peak without misfiring. In theory, the engine should lean way down without getting rough because I've modified the intake manifold and also am fabricating the exhaust system with equal length runners, which collect into two pipes. But theories have a way of not working out as planned. I'll report once the engine is running. Corky Scott |
#3
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Every thing I've read indicates that you really can't do it with carbureted
engine and single EGT probe. The mixture is quite different in each cylinder due to the poor mixing in the intake manifold. Rather, you need matched fuel injectors and an EGT probe on each cylinder to avoid problems. Rod "Roger Long" om wrote in message ... Is anyone in this group interested in or experimenting with Lean of Peak operation? I'm especially interested in the experience of anyone doing it with a fixed pitch carb engine with single EGT and CHT probes. -- Roger Long |
#4
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I did it on a flight Monday with the O-320 H2AD in our 172 N. It's been
discovered in the past few months that using carb heat improves the mixture distribution, probably by the heat increasing vaporization. Not all engines will do it and there may even be individual variation among the same models in the same airframes. Without matched injectors and an engine monitor, you can't be sure one or more of the cylinders haven't gone over to the high stress region just ROP so it's probably a good idea to limit LOP operation to 60% power. My engine was just a hair rough but I saw the CHT go down 25 degrees. It was roughness you would have to listen carefully for, not something that would be annoying. I did a lot of fiddling to be sure that I really was LOP and watching of gauges. Now that I know what to listen and look for, I think it will be a lot easier. -- Roger Long |
#5
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Roger Long wrote:
Is anyone in this group interested in or experimenting with Lean of Peak operation? I'm especially interested in the experience of anyone doing it with a fixed pitch carb engine with single EGT and CHT probes. I don't have exactly that setup, but pretty close. I've got an O-360 A2A with an Ellison throttle body carb on my COZY MKIV, with four EGT/CHT's. I've started trying to run LOP lately, but only under 75% power. I generally find that I can get to 50 degrees LOP or so on the hottest cylinder (haven't checked all four cylinders all the time yet - I've got a manual rotary switch - maybe on the way to S&F tomorrow from MA I'll have some time to play with it). If I try to lean it out more than that, it starts running pretty rough, I get uncomfortable, and the canard shakes. Now, I DON'T have a fuel flow gauge, so I really don't know what effect this is having, other than slowing me down a few mph. I've just been playing with it to see what happens. -- Marc J. Zeitlin http://marc.zeitlin.home.comcast.net/ http://www.cozybuilders.org/ Copyright (c) 2004 |
#6
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The LOP guru (Walter Atkinson one of the Advanced Pilot Seminar people) told
me in a post on a Cessna Pilot Association forum that 25 degrees LOP is all you need to do at these power settings with our O-320. Your 360 shouldn't be very different. The advantages are a cleaner burning engine, less stress on pistons and connecting rods due to peak pressures occurring later when the rod has more mechanical advantage on the crankshaft and lower cylinder head temperatures. CO production will also be lower to non-existent. The fuel savings probably wouldn't be significant in terms of range unless the flight was a squeaker but could add up to something pretty substantial over the life of the engine. Lot's of good stuff on this in the Pelican's Pearch columns over on Avweb. These articles mostly predate the discovery that carb heat makes it more feasible on simple engines. -- Roger Long |
#7
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The advantages are a cleaner burning engine, less stress on pistons and
connecting rods due to peak pressures occurring later when the rod has more mechanical advantage on the crankshaft and lower cylinder head temperatures. CO production will also be lower to non-existent. The engine will burn plenty clean enough ROP. Stress levels are well within limits ROP Cylinder temps are well within limits ROP CO? So what! Goes out the exhaust. The only advantage to running LOP is an engine that runs at a lower BSFC. Which increases range, not so much by decreasing fuel consumption, but by slowing the airplane down closer to best range speed. Walter Atkinson is a dentist. He once told me that my IO-520D was more like a Wright 3350 "Cyclone" engine than a O-470U. He is in well over his head. Karl |
#8
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![]() "kage" wrote in message ... The engine will burn plenty clean enough ROP. Stress levels are well within limits ROP Cylinder temps are well within limits ROP CO? So what! Goes out the exhaust. The only advantage to running LOP is an engine that runs at a lower BSFC. Which increases range, not so much by decreasing fuel consumption, but by slowing the airplane down closer to best range speed. Walter Atkinson is a dentist. He once told me that my IO-520D was more like a Wright 3350 "Cyclone" engine than a O-470U. He is in well over his head. Man...10,000 hours on test stands, tons of computer analysis and you know more than the guys with dirt under their nails. I'm impressed!!! And your qualifications are, what, again? |
#9
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My gripe is with Walter, not GAMI.
Walter is a dentist, and clearly not an engineer. His association with GAMI was never that of an engineer. He should leave the engineering to George Braly and the talking to John Deakin. You also totally missed the point. GAMIjectors are great. They do everything as advertised. But most of what they do is an answer to a problem that doesn't exist. I've used them since GAMI serial #19. Engines ran great before GAMIs however. Twenty years ago Continentals ran easily to TBO. That is not the case today and a set of GAMIs will not help the longevity of these poorly built engines at all. Even John Deakin burned out a set of Continental cylinders in 500 hours LOP in his Bonanza. And their highly touted fuel savings are, for the most part, due to a decrease in speed. You know, all that drag increase with V squared. CHTs are just fine ROP. Engines run clean enough ROP. Engine stresses have been doing just fine now for 100 years ROP. CO is not a problem in maintained exhaust systems. Airplanes fly faster ROP. Even the LOP diehards admit engines run smoother ROP. Gamis have more value in a turbocharged engine. And, I have plenty of dirt under my nails, thank you for asking. .. "Tom Sixkiller" wrote in message news ![]() "kage" wrote in message ... The engine will burn plenty clean enough ROP. Stress levels are well within limits ROP Cylinder temps are well within limits ROP CO? So what! Goes out the exhaust. The only advantage to running LOP is an engine that runs at a lower BSFC. Which increases range, not so much by decreasing fuel consumption, but by slowing the airplane down closer to best range speed. Walter Atkinson is a dentist. He once told me that my IO-520D was more like a Wright 3350 "Cyclone" engine than a O-470U. He is in well over his head. Man...10,000 hours on test stands, tons of computer analysis and you know more than the guys with dirt under their nails. I'm impressed!!! And your qualifications are, what, again? |
#10
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Roger,
I'm especially interested in the experience of anyone doing it with a fixed pitch carb engine with single EGT and CHT probes. How would you know you're LOP on all cylinders with that kind of set-up? Our Tobago (O-360) will not run smoothly LOP. I haven't tried to enhance smoothness by adding carb heat, which some say helps even out fuel distribution. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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