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Woah! It sounds like something may be wrong with this engine. Bad baffling
could be it if it is running very hot. Nothing you do with the mixture should make that much difference in oil temperature. If your prop (fixed I assume) conforms to the type certificate, over speed should not be a problem unless you descend without pulling power. That engine should run fine WOT for hours. If you are pulling power after five minutes on a 10 - 20 minute climb, you are making the engine work harder and get hotter. Fix your baffle problems immediately. Make sure you don't have any induction leaks and the engine is set up properly. If you are not a member of the Cessna Pilots Association, join. The $40.00 dues has saved us literally thousands. Read Deakin's articles on engine management at Avweb.com. They are mostly about larger and more complicated engines but you'll learn some good stuff about yours. Search the CPA fourms for threads on leaning and engine operation. -- Roger Long "Darrel Toepfer" wrote in message .. . Roger Long wrote: A 25 LOP EGT will be 50 degrees higher than 75 ROP but changes the mixture creates in the combustion timing offset this so that CHT is usually the same or slightly lower. This small difference in EGT has no effect on the engine or exhaust system whatever. Hard to say what was going on without at least one cylinder of CHT data. I'd like to add one of those digital wonders one day. Next project is to replace the baffle gasketing, they're getting limp... None of this should effect your oil tempearature. Ours runs the same in the winter as the summer because the thermostat just sends more or less through the oil cooler. It went up, just under the redline... An important part of operating an engine without an all cylinder analyzer this way is to keep power settings at or below 60%. You should make up a table from your POH for reference but flying with carb heat on will make the engines like the O-320 pretty much self limiting. It also improves the mixture distribution so that the engine will run leaner with acceptable smoothness. The drop off in RPM and onset of roughness is less abrupt and more predictable with carb heat on. Cont. 0-300D '65 C172F I now use WOT for almost all cruise above 3000 feet. Our concern is not to overrev the engine, or limit WOT to less than 5 minutes... You can read more he http://baldeagleflyingclub.org/Manual.htm Thanks... |
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