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#1
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Hi All!
OK, since the collective talent in this group greatly exceeds mine and those around me... ![]() Today the engine in our 151 (O 320-150hp)Warrior stumbled during power reduction, and we were able to repeat the symptom..... Here are details OAT -5 C, 2350 rpm, kinda rough air, pulled back throttle to decend after passing traffic.. I think we hit a bump which caused the throttle to be retarded quicker than normal, engine stumbles for 1 second and resumed operation at the new (lower ) throttle setting. We were able to repeat this several times, carb heat on/off, fuel pump on/off, leaned rich of peak/ full rich, left tank/right tank, rt mag/left mag/both. - as long as we waited a couple of minutes to try again. No evidence of carb icing, dew point was +10C Moving the throttle immediately back to cruise, then sudden retard, no problem. The stumble could be repeated by waiting 2 -3 minutes . Recent maintenance, oil & filter change 1.5 hrs ago. The stumble was like the mixture was momentairly too lean, similar to the lean test during runup... At 3500 ft, lean setting was at 60% of mix lever travel to full rich.. Any thoughts from you engine talents out there? Cheers! Dave |
#2
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Not obvious yet. What kind of fuel?
Check the listed temps. The OAT will always be higher than the dew point. It is normal for a leaned engine running with carb heat ON to briefly stumble (lean out even more) when carb heat is taken OFF. Doesn't describe your case though. |
#3
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In my PA-28-161 (Warrior II), I occasionally get stumbles, both with my
old and new engine. Like you, I usually notice them in turbulence. My guess (I don't have enough expertise to call it a 'theory') is that the problem is actually a momentary change in the plane's angle of attack due to turbulence. Since the Warrior has a fixed-pitch prop, the RPM will drop when the AoA becomes higher. When the turbulence goes the other way, you should get a power surge (as if the plane were in a dive) -- I think I remember that as well, but I'll have to keep my eyes open. Does anyone have a better guess? All the best, David |
#4
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accelerator pump mis-behaving?
Michelle Dave wrote: Hi All! OK, since the collective talent in this group greatly exceeds mine and those around me... ![]() Today the engine in our 151 (O 320-150hp)Warrior stumbled during power reduction, and we were able to repeat the symptom..... Here are details OAT -5 C, 2350 rpm, kinda rough air, pulled back throttle to decend after passing traffic.. I think we hit a bump which caused the throttle to be retarded quicker than normal, engine stumbles for 1 second and resumed operation at the new (lower ) throttle setting. We were able to repeat this several times, carb heat on/off, fuel pump on/off, leaned rich of peak/ full rich, left tank/right tank, rt mag/left mag/both. - as long as we waited a couple of minutes to try again. No evidence of carb icing, dew point was +10C Moving the throttle immediately back to cruise, then sudden retard, no problem. The stumble could be repeated by waiting 2 -3 minutes . Recent maintenance, oil & filter change 1.5 hrs ago. The stumble was like the mixture was momentairly too lean, similar to the lean test during runup... At 3500 ft, lean setting was at 60% of mix lever travel to full rich.. Any thoughts from you engine talents out there? Cheers! Dave |
#5
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Whooops! DP was MINUS 10C... my bad.
100 Av gas Nope.. symptom same, carb ht on or off.. TY! Dave On 4 Dec 2005 17:25:53 -0800, "nrp" wrote: Not obvious yet. What kind of fuel? Check the listed temps. The OAT will always be higher than the dew point. It is normal for a leaned engine running with carb heat ON to briefly stumble (lean out even more) when carb heat is taken OFF. Doesn't describe your case though. |
#6
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This is common with O-320 carburetor engines when in the leaned
condition... Going full rich for three seconds before changing the throttle normally smooths this out... A possible cause is worn shaft bushings where you get air leakage past the butterfly shaft with movement... Another possible cause is slop in the linkage causes the butterfly to flop backwards as soon as you retard past the magic balance point... In combination with the above two it may also be that there is a butterfly opening below which the swirl pattern in the intake manifold suddenly collapses before re-establishing a new swirl pattern... Or, it could be just bad karma... denny |
#7
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The mixture will lean somewhat while the throttle is
closing, and a weak ignition could cause the stumble as the mixture becomes harder to ignite. Might check mags and plugs. Dan |
#8
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Dave wrote:
Hi All! OK, since the collective talent in this group greatly exceeds mine and those around me... ![]() Today the engine in our 151 (O 320-150hp)Warrior stumbled during power reduction, and we were able to repeat the symptom..... I'm a little hesitant to reply since I can't supply details or references, but what the heck, this is usenet. I've owned an Archer (carbureted O360) and have heard of other Cherokees with this same symptom. I was told there is a transition in the carburetor at about 1500 RPM, and that many of these engines will stumble across this transtion. Maybe it's a transition from the idle jets to the main jets(?), I don't know what I'm talking about. Anyway, I spent a lot of time and money trying to diagnose this symptom in the Archer. Two owners later, the airplane is still around at my home airport, and I'm told it still has the stumble. It gets you when you're on short final and reduced power, and decide you need a little more power to get to the runway. Dave |
#9
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I have a musketeer with an O-320. I have a stumble also. I had the engine
overhauled (not because of the stumble) and it still does the same thing. My opinion is that it is associated the intake manifold geometry. I am no expert. "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1133797784.923574@sj-nntpcache-3... snip I was told there is a transition in the carburetor at about 1500 RPM, and that many of these engines will stumble across this transtion. Maybe it's a transition from the idle jets to the main jets(?), I don't know what I'm talking about. Anyway, I spent a lot of time and money trying to diagnose this symptom in the Archer. Two owners later, the airplane is still around at my home airport, and I'm told it still has the stumble. It gets you when you're on short final and reduced power, and decide you need a little more power to get to the runway. Dave |
#10
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We have the same problem with two Archers and a 180.
The problem existed before and after overhaul of both 0-360 engines [1 by Lycoming & 1 by Signature] Both rebuilds had overhauled carbs fitted. The other Archer with 2100 SMOH has the same stumble at or near 1500 RPM. A clever guy on the net will soon enlighten us as to the cause I am sure ?? -- Roy N5804F Piper Archer "I have had some bad landings but I have never missed the runway" "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1133797784.923574@sj-nntpcache-3... Dave wrote: Hi All! OK, since the collective talent in this group greatly exceeds mine and those around me... ![]() Today the engine in our 151 (O 320-150hp)Warrior stumbled during power reduction, and we were able to repeat the symptom..... I'm a little hesitant to reply since I can't supply details or references, but what the heck, this is usenet. I've owned an Archer (carbureted O360) and have heard of other Cherokees with this same symptom. I was told there is a transition in the carburetor at about 1500 RPM, and that many of these engines will stumble across this transtion. Maybe it's a transition from the idle jets to the main jets(?), I don't know what I'm talking about. Anyway, I spent a lot of time and money trying to diagnose this symptom in the Archer. Two owners later, the airplane is still around at my home airport, and I'm told it still has the stumble. It gets you when you're on short final and reduced power, and decide you need a little more power to get to the runway. Dave |
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