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#11
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Elliot, you can expect the leaning police to come and take you away...
Heresy, that's what it is, heresy.... Denny wrote in message ... One thing to remember is that for most operations, even at sea level, full rich is too rich. |
#12
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Rick, good advice... Everyone operates a bit differently... For a routine
approach and landing I leave the mixture and prop set at cruise the whole way until shutdown on the ramp... If I need to go around it is a burned in habit that everything goes to the firewall with one, fingers spread wide, push.... That will change if I am landing at a fly-in with oodles of traffic or if the weather is rough and scummy, then I will bring the props up to 2500 and mixture 90% rich about the time I turn final, since the odds that I will need to jockey the power are greater in those conditions... Denny "Rick Durden" wrote in message m... Roger, You have people who are running the engine full rich all the time. It was not built for 100LL fuel, so it needs to be leaned in cruise and in descent |
#13
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#14
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We try to stay on top of everything on this engine and not begrudge it a
penny. The mags are done every 500 hours and are only a couple hundred out. We have the basics checked every 100 - 150 hours, pull the lifters, etc. This has certainly paid off in an engine that has always run like a top with not even minor plug fouling till now. It starts almost as well in the dead of winter with a oil pan preheat as it does in the summer. Meanwhile, the flight school planes are going "grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind..." -- Roger Long JerryK wrote in message ... How long since the mags were overhauled? It is supposed to be done every 500 hours or so. |
#15
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"Rick Durden" wrote in message
m... Once you lean the airplane for cruise you need not change the mixture on the descent. The checklist says to enrichen as necessary to avoid roughness, so don't enrichen the mixture unless the engine runs rough. Yes, but that statement should be further qualified by saying that descents should be made at less than 75% power or else EGT and CHT could exceed operating limits. 65% power sounds like a good number. Some carbed engines with good fuel distribution will run smooth when too lean (close to peak, either rich or lean of peak). |
#16
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On 20 Aug 2003 12:24:20 -0700, Rick Durden wrote:
park. If you make a go around, push the mixture to rich, carb heat to cold and apply full throttle. Some folks don't like the extra work with the mixture at that time, so they go to full rich on downwind, Depends on the aircraft. On many aircraft, you can push prop, mixture and throttle forward at the same time with one hand which makes it easier to follow that practise. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#17
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#19
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On Thu, 21 Aug 2003 21:42:44 GMT, "Roger Long"
om wrote: We try to stay on top of everything on this engine and not begrudge it a penny. The mags are done every 500 hours and are only a couple hundred out. We have the basics checked every 100 - 150 hours, pull the lifters, etc. This has certainly paid off in an engine that has always run like a top with not even minor plug fouling till now. It starts almost as well in the dead of winter with a oil pan preheat as it does in the summer. Meanwhile, the flight school planes are going "grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, grind..." I use a progressive maintenance program, but.... I have the mags checked at annual. Only checked. Both have close to 1300 hours on them. I did replace the plugs at roughly 600 hours. I've never had a problem with plug fowling on the Deb. Compression is still good.. The vacuum pump is original on the engine at close to 1300 hours so it doesn't have much farther to a Factory reman. As it has no filter I change oil at 25 hours. At 25 hours it's difficult to see if the level is down at all. Probably a pint or less. It runs smooth and starts easy. I have a Tanis heater on each cylinder head and on the case. Once the temperatures fall below freezing the heater stays on 24 X 7 with the entire front of the plane wrapped in two layers of space age blankets which actually extend well beyond the firewall. I get very close to 190 cruise on 13 1/2 to 14 GPH. I always cruise at 75% unless too high to be able to get 75%. I've never found it necessary to lean while on the ground except when I was at Goodland KS and Jefco. There I leaned for takeoff. I either run 24 X 24, or adjust to one inch over square adjusted for 75%. The one thing I want to add to the engine are gami injectors and monitor the EGT and CHTs on all 6. I have had one complete engine failure and that was due to the diaphragm in the fuel cutoff valve located in the distribution block (spider) on top of the engine. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) |
#20
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Chris Kennedy writes:
Rick, I had a talk with my mechanic a couple of months ago about leaning when idling. He says for my carburator and C-90 engine, and I suppose many other aircraft engines, leaning at idle doesn't do anything unless it is nearly at idle cutoff. It is only when the RPMs are well above idle that the mixture control begins to really control. So does leaning on the ground--during idle--do anything unless it is leaned nearly to idle cutoff? Up here in the mountains we lean to the point of stumbling and try not to reduce RPMs below 1200 on our O-540 (as does the local FBO with its O-360). Except on very cold winter days we lean for departure as well. As far as I understand, carbureted engines have a separate idle mixture control that needs to be adjusted with a screwdriver on the carburetor itself (i.e. on the ground, by an A&P). If that is set too rich, you can lean during ground idle until the cows come home and still end up with fouled plugs. All the best, David -- David Megginson, , http://www.megginson.com/ |
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