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Before starting the last engine I put together, I borrowed a oil pressure
pot to fill the galleys. Attached at the oil pressure takeoff and pushed oil in by air pressure before the first start. Used a quart or so. It not only fills the galleys but also pumps up the lifters. Engine fired on the 2 blade and ran smooth! Kent Felkins Tulsa "Viperdoc" wrote in message ... After sending my Lycoming AEIO-540 to the factory for a mandatory repair it has finally returned. At Oshkosh this year the people at the Lycoming booth swore it would take only two weeks, but when the actual paperwork arrived everything said one month in the shop. It ended up taking a little over a month, from the day it was crated by my mechanic to the day it was returned. Lycoming says they will pay for the costs of removing and remounting the engine, along with the shipping as well as the repairs. Mine only had a little over 300TT. I guess they figure the costs of the new crankshafts as well as the repairs for all of the engines would be a lot cheaper than series of very expensive product liability lawsuits! Anyway, it looks like it'll need mineral oil for a while, and then there's also the risk of something else working loose or breaking after the removal and install- we'll have to wait and see in this regard. I may take it and run it hard for a few hours, and then take it back to the mechanic to pull the cowling and make sure everything stayed tight. I've heard a lot of different advice on breaking in a new engine- run at full power, don't run at any power for a long period of time, vary the power settings (MP and prop), etc. Any advice? When do you switch back to regular detergent oil? |
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Fly wrote:
Before starting the last engine I put together, I borrowed a oil pressure pot to fill the galleys. I did something similar when I replaced the engine in a van I owned long ago. I scavenged an empty freon tank, removed the valve, and poured four quarts of oil into it with a funnel (seemed to take forever). Then I put the valve back in and hooked it up to an air compressor. Once I got it pressurized, I turned it upside down, hooked it up to the hole for the oil pressure sending unit, and opened the valve. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#3
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I did something similar when I replaced the engine in a van I owned long ago. I
scavenged an empty freon tank, removed the valve, and poured four quarts of oil into it with a funnel (seemed to take forever). Then I put the valve back in and hooked it up to an air compressor. Once I got it pressurized, I turned it upside down, hooked it up to the hole for the oil pressure sending unit, and opened the valve. Probably think you're clever don't you asshole? |
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