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On preflight I noticed a little oil seeping around the bolt on the
pilot's front cylinder (Superior Milleniums). This is on a '67 C150 w/ the Continental O200. I grabbed the bolt and turned it @ 2 1/2 times until it was finger tight against the cylinder. Partner and I have grounded the plane. The gents hanging out at the FBO say, put a wrench on her and fly the darn thing. We'd prefer to stay safe, legal and alive. Anyone else experience this and what am I in for? Thanks folks. Greg |
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![]() "Greg Hopp" wrote in message om... On preflight I noticed a little oil seeping around the bolt on the pilot's front cylinder (Superior Milleniums). This is on a '67 C150 w/ the Continental O200. I grabbed the bolt and turned it @ 2 1/2 times until it was finger tight against the cylinder. Partner and I have grounded the plane. The gents hanging out at the FBO say, put a wrench on her and fly the darn thing. We'd prefer to stay safe, legal and alive. Anyone else experience this and what am I in for? Thanks folks. Greg Yeah, use a torque wrench and tighten it to its lower or middle torque limit and go fly. Check the torque on the rest of the nuts too. You should be tightening a nut instead of a bolt. There are two sets of torque values on those nuts because they go on bolts (or studs) of two different diameters. AN5 and AN6? You're probably going to have to use a special wrench for the torque wrench to connect to, but there should be plenty of those around to borrow. There are here. |
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Partner and I have grounded the plane. The gents hanging out at the
FBO say, put a wrench on her and fly the darn thing. We'd prefer to stay safe, legal and alive. Anyone else experience this and what am I in for? Thanks folks. Were all the bolts lose, or just one? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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In article , Greg Hopp wrote:
Partner and I have grounded the plane. The gents hanging out at the FBO say, put a wrench on her and fly the darn thing. We'd prefer to stay safe, legal and alive. Don't just crank it down with a wrench! In general, every bolt connecting everything to your engine has a proper torque. A lot of those torque settings are way lower then you'd think, and you can overtorque things easily. With that said, you have two choices he A) Put a torque wrench on it, tighten it and then fly it. Torque settings are in the Lycoming Direct Drive Overhaul Manual (~$17 for a reprint from Aircraft Spruce, or find the equivalent Continental publication). Check it every few hours. B) Take it to your A&P. He will pull out his torque wrench, his copy of the Lycoming Direct Drive Overhaul Manual, tighen it, and tell you to check it every few hours. It's up to you. Tina Marie Tripacer N3653P -- http://www.tripacerdriver.com "...One of the main causes of the fall of the Roman Empire was that, lacking zero, they had no way to indicate successful termination of their C programs." (Robert Firth) |
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In article ,
Greg Hopp wrote: On preflight I noticed a little oil seeping around the bolt on the pilot's front cylinder (Superior Milleniums). A guy across the hanger row from me lost a cylinder in flight on a relatively new (60-70 hour) engine. Looking at the studs it appeared that one bolt had been lose and backed off, allowing the other 3 to shear off. I'd be looking at what kind of damage might have happened to the adjacent studs while the bolt was loose. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
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![]() "Ben Jackson" wrote in message news:jMcYb.46366$uV3.92300@attbi_s51... In article , Greg Hopp wrote: On preflight I noticed a little oil seeping around the bolt on the pilot's front cylinder (Superior Milleniums). A guy across the hanger row from me lost a cylinder in flight on a relatively new (60-70 hour) engine. Looking at the studs it appeared that one bolt had been lose and backed off, allowing the other 3 to shear off. I'd be looking at what kind of damage might have happened to the adjacent studs while the bolt was loose. What kind of engine only has three studs/bolts holding the cylinder on? OBTW nuts go on studs not bolts. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
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![]() "Dave Stadt" wrote in message ... "Ben Jackson" wrote in message news:jMcYb.46366$uV3.92300@attbi_s51... In article , Greg Hopp wrote: On preflight I noticed a little oil seeping around the bolt on the pilot's front cylinder (Superior Milleniums). A guy across the hanger row from me lost a cylinder in flight on a relatively new (60-70 hour) engine. Looking at the studs it appeared that one bolt had been lose and backed off, allowing the other 3 to shear off. I'd be looking at what kind of damage might have happened to the adjacent studs while the bolt was loose. What kind of engine only has three studs/bolts holding the cylinder on? OBTW nuts go on studs not bolts. There would be six nuts holding each of four cylinders down on an O-200 Continental, the standard engine on a Cessna 150. IIRC, 2 are AN5 and 4 are AN6, i. e., the stud diameters are 5/16" and 3/8" respectively. I watch my nuts, you should pardon the expression. They have anti-sabotage paint on them and palnuts are even better. Torque is often not enough to hold them from backing off, and they certainly do not have (and are not supposed to have) lockwashers under them. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
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In article ,
Tina Marie wrote: In article , Greg Hopp wrote: Partner and I have grounded the plane. The gents hanging out at the FBO say, put a wrench on her and fly the darn thing. We'd prefer to stay safe, legal and alive. Don't just crank it down with a wrench! In general, every bolt connecting everything to your engine has a proper torque. A lot of those torque settings are way lower then you'd think, and you can overtorque things easily. With that said, you have two choices he A) Put a torque wrench on it, tighten it and then fly it. Torque settings are in the Lycoming Direct Drive Overhaul Manual (~$17 for a reprint from Aircraft Spruce, or find the equivalent Continental publication). Check it every few hours. B) Take it to your A&P. He will pull out his torque wrench, his copy of the Lycoming Direct Drive Overhaul Manual, tighen it, and tell you to check it every few hours. It's up to you. Tina Marie Tripacer N3653P According to my Lycomung Overhaul Manual, the cylinder torque settings a 1/2" base nuts: 600 in-lb (50 ft-lb) 3/8" base nuts: 300 in-lb (25 ft-lb) Tightening sequence: (1/2" first) On the O-235, tighten as if you have 1/2" bolts, too 1/2" 3/8" 4 1 4 1 3 2 3 2 |
#9
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"Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message
news ![]() Tightening sequence: (1/2" first) This is something I was thinking of. What happens if one comes loose? Should you just tighten it to thee correct torque, or should the others be loosened then all tightened in sequence? Maybe even replacing the gasket? (don't know about gaskets...I would only guess as to the presence of one) Paul |
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90% of engineering is common sense and only 10% is an incredibly complex
science... Luckily the first 90% is what keeps common machines running, and that last 10% is reserved for machinery like the space shuttle, mars explorer, etc.. denny " The gents hanging out at the FBO say, put a wrench on her and fly the darn thing. |
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