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#31
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"Ash Wyllie" wrote
GAMI claims something else is going on. Fuel from the upstream injectors is leaking into the downstream intake ports, making the downstream cylinders richer than the upstream cylinders. They can claim anything they want - but if what they were describing was real, the coke bottle test would show it and adjusting the injector nozzles would fix it. The coke bottle test won't find this, as it is an artifact of the way air flows in the intake manifold. I think we're talking at cross-purposes here. If you mean that the problem is caused by improper air flow in the induction system, then we have no argument. This is indeed the issue. And adjusting the injector nozzles is what GAMI is doing. By making accurate injectors designed for each cylinder all cylinders provide the same power. Well, no. If the air flow in the induction system is such that it causes fuel to be carried from one cylinder to another after it leaves the injector nozzles, there's no chance at all that the cylinders are all getting an equal charge of air. Air flow requires changes in air pressure. Thus the cylinders DO NOT all provide the same power - they run the same mixture, which is not the same thing. Aircraft engines don't fail in the air, too often... Really? Compared to what? Certainly not to car engines failing on the road... Michael |
#32
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It does at takeoff power
No, running sufficiently LOP at "Takeoff Power" would do NO damage. REPEAT NONE! First, you can't get anywhere near 100% power LOP, and second, the CHT and EGT will STILL be significantly lower LOP than ROP. Besides nobody would ever takeoff LOP, including the zealots at Advanced? and GAMI. Although, Braly runs his 550 at 90% continuously with no long term effects. I'm sorry if you found the term "overlean" confusing YOU are the one who is seriously confused! Karl "Michael" wrote in message om... Thomas Borchert wrote NO, NO, NO!!! Running "overlean" does NOT hurt cylinders! It does at takeoff power. At takeoff power, a VERY rich mixture (probably 200 degrees rich of peak, or more) is normally and properly used. An induction leak can cause the mixture to be significantly leaner, meaning much closer to peak. Running at peak EGT at takeoff power most certainly will hurt the cylinders. If the induction leak was bad enough that a cylinder was running well lean of peak, that would probably be OK - but in that case, there would be noticeable roughness and loss of power. The insidious thing about a slight induction leak is that there is no loss of power - in fact there is a slight gain - and smooth operation is maintained right to peak on the affected cylinder. Without all-cylinder EGT, this is undetectable. The design of the induction systems in certified aircraft engines is such that they are prone to this problem of having one jug running at close to peak due to an induction leak while the other jugs run well rich. Thus they are, by design, unreliable junk. I'm sorry if you found the term "overlean" confusing. In this context, it simply means leaner than is proper for the operation. Michael |
#33
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Thus the cylinders DO NOT all provide the same power
Wrong again, Bozo! The air distribution is very good. The fuel distribution is poor due to the "occult" migration of fuel. Gami's solve that and the power from each cylinder is equal, at least MUCH better than from TCM. That is why there is no vibration LOP with GAMI's. Karl If you had any engineering skills, you could read the graphs of the converted engines. "Michael" wrote in message om... "Ash Wyllie" wrote GAMI claims something else is going on. Fuel from the upstream injectors is leaking into the downstream intake ports, making the downstream cylinders richer than the upstream cylinders. They can claim anything they want - but if what they were describing was real, the coke bottle test would show it and adjusting the injector nozzles would fix it. The coke bottle test won't find this, as it is an artifact of the way air flows in the intake manifold. I think we're talking at cross-purposes here. If you mean that the problem is caused by improper air flow in the induction system, then we have no argument. This is indeed the issue. And adjusting the injector nozzles is what GAMI is doing. By making accurate injectors designed for each cylinder all cylinders provide the same power. Well, no. If the air flow in the induction system is such that it causes fuel to be carried from one cylinder to another after it leaves the injector nozzles, there's no chance at all that the cylinders are all getting an equal charge of air. Air flow requires changes in air pressure. Thus the cylinders DO NOT all provide the same power - they run the same mixture, which is not the same thing. Aircraft engines don't fail in the air, too often... Really? Compared to what? Certainly not to car engines failing on the road... Michael |
#34
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Michael opined
"Ash Wyllie" wrote GAMI claims something else is going on. Fuel from the upstream injectors is leaking into the downstream intake ports, making the downstream cylinders richer than the upstream cylinders. They can claim anything they want - but if what they were describing was real, the coke bottle test would show it and adjusting the injector nozzles would fix it. The coke bottle test won't find this, as it is an artifact of the way air flows in the intake manifold. I think we're talking at cross-purposes here. If you mean that the problem is caused by improper air flow in the induction system, then we have no argument. This is indeed the issue. I agree. And adjusting the injector nozzles is what GAMI is doing. By making accurate injectors designed for each cylinder all cylinders provide the same power. Well, no. If the air flow in the induction system is such that it causes fuel to be carried from one cylinder to another after it leaves the injector nozzles, there's no chance at all that the cylinders are all getting an equal charge of air. Air flow requires changes in air pressure. Thus the cylinders DO NOT all provide the same power - they run the same mixture, which is not the same thing. True. But by running the same mixture the engines run much smoother. And they can be leaned to LOP with big fuel savings. GAMI equiped engines can to a limited extent be controlled by the mixture. Aircraft engines don't fail in the air, too often... Really? Compared to what? Certainly not to car engines failing on the road... How often do auto engines fail these days? -ash Cthulhu for President! Why vote for a lesser evil? |
#35
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Michael,
what Karl says. Running at peak EGT at takeoff power most certainly will hurt the cylinders. Sure. Is that "overlean"? Or "not quite overlean"? Or "not overlean enough"? "Overlean" has no sensible meaning. If the induction leak was bad enough that a cylinder was running well lean of peak, that would probably be OK - Perzactly! -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#36
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"kage" wrote
Thus the cylinders DO NOT all provide the same power Wrong again, Bozo! The air distribution is very good. The fuel distribution is poor due to the "occult" migration of fuel. Gami's solve that and the power from each cylinder is equal, at least MUCH better than from TCM. Much better than TCM I buy, Bozo. Equal I don't buy. That is why there is no vibration LOP with GAMI's. In fact there is, and I've personally observed it. I know more than one person who installed GAMI's and still won't run LOP because it's not as smooth as running ROP. If you had any engineering skills, you could read the graphs of the converted engines. I've read the graphs. If you had real engineering skills, you would notice what they DON'T show - such as individual power output from each cylinder. As for my engineering skills, well, let's just say that everyone who knows me and is reading this is chuckling right now. Michael |
#37
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"kage" wrote in message
... It does at takeoff power No, running sufficiently LOP at "Takeoff Power" would do NO damage. REPEAT NONE! First, you can't get anywhere near 100% power LOP, and second, the CHT and EGT will STILL be significantly lower LOP than ROP. So that's not "Takeoff Power", is it. The problem is that for a given CHT, you can get about 95% of maximum power operating at a very rich mixture, but to achieve the same CHT lean of peak you'll be down at maybe 80% of maximum power. Where power is not critical, e.g. in the cruise, that's not a problem, but as you recognize, you don't take off like that. If you try to achieve the same 95% power lean of peak, you do end up frying the cylinders, albeit while saving gas. Julian Scarfe |
#38
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Thomas Borchert wrote
what Karl says. is mostly rude. Running at peak EGT at takeoff power most certainly will hurt the cylinders. Sure. Is that "overlean"? Or "not quite overlean"? Or "not overlean enough"? "Overlean" has no sensible meaning. You can argue semantics forever. Overlean, in my opinion, has a perfectly sensible meaning - too lean for the conditions. In this case, the condition is takeoff power. To produce takeoff power, you need a mixture well rich of peak. If you are leaner than about 150-200 degrees ROP, you are overlean for takeoff. Depending on how lean you are, one of two things will happen - both bad: If the induction leak was bad enough that a cylinder was running well lean of peak, that would probably be OK - Perzactly! But you missed the second part: but in that case, there would be noticeable roughness and loss of power In other words - it would be OK, in the sense that you would not hurt the engine - but you won't develop takeoff power either, and that can hurt the engine in another way - it will be about the first thing at the scene of the crash when you don't clear the obstacle because you didn't make full takeoff power. If the induction leak is only slight, and only causes the jug to be slightly lean (meaning at or just slightly rich of peak) - that's still overlean. You will make takeoff power (and a bit more) and save fuel - but keep doing it and you will destroy the jug. The reality is that you just can't run lean of peak at takeoff power. You can't run at or slightly rich of peak either. You must run well rich of peak. Anything less is overlean. Sure, you can run LOP at full throttle (and max RPM if equipped with a CS prop) but you still won't be running takeoff power - it will be more like 85-90% of what's available at that density altitude. Michael |
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