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#1
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Hi, group. I've come to this august assembelage of persons to ask for
ideas, and to discuss a few of mine. I am the proud owner and flyer of a lovely, new, RV 8A. Alas, I am not the builder, but as I am sure you know, owning one begins the process of working with one... At any rate, we have around 135 hours on this machine. Engine is an IO-360-A1B6 with one Plasma ignition, one Bendix mag, Gami injectors, Aero Composites CS prop, stock Van's intake with K&N filter on the left front baffle shelf. Since the airplane started its flying life, itsbeen power down. The engine is one of those Bulldog engines imported from England. It has around 900 hours total, and is fresh (just before installation) off of an overhaul. Compressions are fine, plugs look good and I am taking good care of it. Van's says a 200 horsepower RV8A will cruise at 210mph at 75% power at 8000 feet. Book says it will climb at 2500 fpm at 1500 pounds. Mine cruises at 182mph and climbs at 1800 fpm. Now, nothing wrong with that performance, but still and all...The airplane is straight and slick. No unusual drag makers. It would seem that I am missing around 25 or so horsepower. Oh yeah, the engine SOUNDS like it is running great, starts great. It is somewhat less great starting hot, and idles badly, when hot...not something that one can't work around, but not as good as it should. I have written that off as typical fuel-injected lyc problems, but perhaps not. Oh yeah, the performance hasn't deteriorated...pretty much what it was from the start. You might ask why I have tolerated it up to now, but I really didn't consider that I was limited until I flew with another RV 8A...which just walks away from me. Makes me look like I make purt' much everybody ELSE look! :-) The two aircraft are nearly identical in appearance, so I became concerned. The most common cause for missing hp is clogged fuel injection/injectors. Now, this is a real possibility, given that the fuel pressure misbehaves (I thought it was just a monitor problem, but I am starting to wonder. I am also dealing with the afore mentioned idle problem. The airplane also really doesn't run well without the boost pump on. I was originally told that the boost pump thingy was "the way that one works" but in the face of my power loss, I wonder, now. Mitigating against that is that the airplane still burns 10-11 gallons per hour, and I would think that if I was fuel limited I would burn less...but that is my speculation. Final point is that the cylinders all run reasonably close both in CHT and EGT...so again, speculating, I think that the injectors per se are OK. Cause number 2 (or so) is a 1 tooth misalignment on the valve timing. It would seem that such a phenomena occurs more regularly than one would think. It is pretty easy to check...you just put the engine at #1TDC and then, with the #2 valve cover off, rock the prop. If the lifters of #2 don't move within 20 or so degrees...that's the diagnosis. Certainly this one is possible, and easily checked. Another possiblility is retarded timing. I have little speculation on that. Tuesday, I am going to go to an A&P who is a bud and we are going to go through things. We'll start with the valve timing, given that it is a trivial exercise. We'll clean out the injection system, 'cause it likely needs it anyway. Of course we'll check the timing. Any of y'all have any OTHER suggestions? The intake manifold would look to be OK, no holes or the like. Thanks for sharing my quandry. Jim |
#2
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Other possibilities for perceived low power:
* engine instruments out of calibration (how does the fuel burn compare with expected?) * bad propeller (wrong helix angle or blade pitch) * airframe with excess drag Good luck with your debugging! Ed Wischmeyer |
#3
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Mine cruises at 182mph and climbs at 1800 fpm. Now, nothing wrong with
that performance, but still and all...The airplane is straight and slick. No unusual drag makers. It would seem that I am missing around 25 or so horsepower I had a similar situation with my RV-4 when I bought it. Climbed OK but was substantially slower than other O-360 powered RVs. It had a Sterba fixed pitch wood prop at the time since metal fixed was not available yet. Tried a Sterba cruise pitch prop with no difference. Got a Sensenich fixed metal 'cruise' prop when they became available and it was like magic. 15 more MPH on the same RPM. Climb RPM was 200 less but the rate of climb was the same. I always thought I needed more power but now I'm not sure. On slightly cooler than standard days my indicated speed is right next to Vne (215 if I remember). If your RPM and manifold vacuum is similar to other make and model RVs with that engine then the engine should be OK. Like mine, it could be the prop airfoil. Jim |
#5
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![]() "Jim Harper" wrote in message om... Hi, group. I've come to this august assembelage of persons to ask for ideas, and to discuss a few of mine. I am the proud owner and flyer of a lovely, new, RV 8A. Alas, I am not the builder, but as I am sure you know, owning one begins the process of working with one... At any rate, we have around 135 hours on this machine. Engine is an IO-360-A1B6 with one Plasma ignition, one Bendix mag, Gami injectors, Aero Composites CS prop, stock Van's intake with K&N filter on the left front baffle shelf. Since the airplane started its flying life, itsbeen power down. The engine is one of those Bulldog engines imported from England. It has around 900 hours total, and is fresh (just before installation) off of an overhaul. Compressions are fine, plugs look good and I am taking good care of it. Van's says a 200 horsepower RV8A will cruise at 210mph at 75% power at 8000 feet. Book says it will climb at 2500 fpm at 1500 pounds. Mine cruises at 182mph and climbs at 1800 fpm. Now, nothing wrong with that performance, but still and all...The airplane is straight and slick. No unusual drag makers. It would seem that I am missing around 25 or so horsepower. snip Any of y'all have any OTHER suggestions? The intake manifold would look to be OK, no holes or the like. Thanks for sharing my quandry. Jim How about a bad camshaft or follower? You could pull the valve covers and plugs, then rotate the engine by hand and measure the movement of the rocker arms to see if you have a worn cam lobe or follower. This is a simple way to determine if there is a valve that doesn't get the same lift as the others... By the way, do you have RPM and MP data on the engine? Are you gettting the reduced performance you quote when running at 75% per the lycoming rpm/mp/temp charts? Is it possible that your tach is off or your MP is low because of a clogged air filter or some other induction problem? KB |
#6
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You are missing more horsepower than that. You are in the regime where
the cube rule applies: to go 11.5% faster (182 to 210) on hp alone, you'll need 55% more horsepower! (Jim Harper) wrote in message . com... Van's says a 200 horsepower RV8A will cruise at 210mph at 75% power at 8000 feet. Book says it will climb at 2500 fpm at 1500 pounds. Mine cruises at 182mph and climbs at 1800 fpm. Now, nothing wrong with that performance, but still and all...The airplane is straight and slick. No unusual drag makers. It would seem that I am missing around 25 or so horsepower. |
#7
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On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:19:04 +0000, JFLEISC wrote:
If your RPM and manifold vacuum is similar to other make and model RVs with that engine then the engine should be OK. Like mine, it could be the prop airfoil. Jim The engine could be way down on power, yet still have the normal rpm and manifold pressure. For example, if you have a constant speed prop and you shut down the engine at high speed using the mags or mixture, it would windmill at the rpm as before, and the manifold pressure would be unchanged. Of course the rpm would fall off once you slowed down, but it illustrates the fact that rpm and MP are not guarantees of power if you have a constant speed prop. -- Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit) Ottawa, Canada http://go.phpwebhosting.com/~khorton/rv8/ e-mail: khorton02(_at_)rogers(_dot_)com |
#8
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#9
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"Kyle Boatright" wrote in message ...
How about a bad camshaft or follower? You could pull the valve covers and plugs, then rotate the engine by hand and measure the movement of the rocker arms to see if you have a worn cam lobe or follower. This is a simple way to determine if there is a valve that doesn't get the same lift as the others... By the way, do you have RPM and MP data on the engine? Are you gettting the reduced performance you quote when running at 75% per the lycoming rpm/mp/temp charts? Is it possible that your tach is off or your MP is low because of a clogged air filter or some other induction problem? KB Thanks to everyone, so far for the excellent suggestions. Kyle: we are gonna check for valve timing, and will pursue looking for a worn cam lobe or follower. Good suggestion, thanks. My tach has been confirmed by an optical tach, so those are both spot on. MP? One of the things we are wondering about is an induction problem, but so far that doesn't look likley. Regarding your comment about RPM/MP data. Yes, I have RPM and MP data, and can cruise at the appropriate RPM and MP for 75% power at a given altitude and temperature. However, if the engine was somehow "derated" to 180 HP, wouldn't I just be getting 75% of 180HP? The constant speed prop is going to adapt to the power output to maintain the appropriate RPM, and the MP is just the MP. One of the things that lead me to this group was the comment elsewhere that IO 360 were hot running engines. Mine is pretty cool running. Hence my suspicion that I am not producing the horsepower! Thanks again, all. One hopes we'll have an answer in a few days! Jim |
#10
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shut down the engine at high speed using the mags or mixture, it would
windmill at the rpm as before, and the manifold pressure would be unchanged. good point. Jim |
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