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![]() RST Engineering wrote: ...tug ... tug ... right about ... THERE. BTW, that copper loaded goose grease is so far superior to the black graphite stuff it isn't even funny. Just FYI Jim I take a little artists brush & paint that coppercoat all over the insulator too--makes'em easier to see if you drop them in the dirt. "Roger" wrote in message ... I've spent the better part of an hour and a half on the net searching, tried to get into the ABS site which appeared to be down, spend several hours searching through what manuals I have, but I couldn't find the torque required for the spark plugs in an IO-470N. |
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![]() jerry wass wrote: RST Engineering wrote: ...tug ... tug ... right about ... THERE. BTW, that copper loaded goose grease is so far superior to the black graphite stuff it isn't even funny. Just FYI Jim I take a little artists brush & paint that coppercoat all over the insulator too--makes'em easier to see if you drop them in the dirt. on another note, the nickel stuff is really great---Back in the gas drillin boom days, the rigs used that stuff out of 5 gallon pails, mopped it on the drill stem joints with mops. the nickel was suspended- (immediately after stirring) in a very heavy chloro-ethylene solvent. anybody need a gallon ?? "Roger" wrote in message ... I've spent the better part of an hour and a half on the net searching, tried to get into the ABS site which appeared to be down, spend several hours searching through what manuals I have, but I couldn't find the torque required for the spark plugs in an IO-470N. |
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On Mon, 04 Jul 2005 18:19:32 -0500, jerry wass
wrote: RST Engineering wrote: ...tug ... tug ... right about ... THERE. BTW, that copper loaded goose grease is so far superior to the black graphite stuff it isn't even funny. Just FYI Jim I take a little artists brush & paint that coppercoat all over the insulator too--makes'em easier to see if you drop them in the dirt. Yah, but if you drop them all in the dirt you'd have to do a new W&B sheet. When I was working for a living (before going back to college and becoming a computer guru) we used a high pressure grease that is meant for handeling high loads as low speeds. It was affectionately referred to as "Bear ****". I'll swear the stuff was alive. I don't know how anything so thick could move so fast. Get a spec of the stuff on you and by the time you gave up trying to get it off, it seemed like it covered half your body. I believe it had Beryllium Dioxide in it, but it may have been Graphite. What ever it was black! I have a whole carton of BR2-S (Beryllium Dioxide grease) in grease gun cartridges. It's Gray and a whole lot easier to get off, but it still gets on every thing you'll touch for the next two days. :-)) I used to be able to get 10 Oz tubes of DC-4 and DC-5 compound for a buck each. The high temperature, red, Silicon RTV (TM) was about the same in large tubes as well. Unfortunately the tubes I had left seem to be a bit *firm* when squeezed. (it's only about 10 years past their shelf life) Oh, yah... I pulled the plugs and every bottom plug had those little beads of lead in them. The stuff was just laying loose, minding its own business with the exception of one plug on the right mag which had a lot of the stuff in it. (Right mag was the one that failed the run up) None of the electrodes were shorted, but I'd imagine the turbulence in there with the engine running would put that stuff right where you wouldn't want it. The plugs are nearly new and look good. At any rate, with all the rain we had and heavy haze tonight, I didn't get a chance to run it up, but I did clean the bugs off the wings, prop, and cowl. (I keep the windshield clean) The old gal is almost clean enough to take up to the ramp for a wash job. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com "Roger" wrote in message ... I've spent the better part of an hour and a half on the net searching, tried to get into the ABS site which appeared to be down, spend several hours searching through what manuals I have, but I couldn't find the torque required for the spark plugs in an IO-470N. |
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