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#11
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On Feb 2, 4:14 pm, "nrp" wrote:
On Feb 2, 3:52 pm, wrote: We've started our airplanes at ambient temps as low as -25C (-13F) without preheat, but they sure don't like it. I'm surprised you got by with that. Must have been a Continental engine? Six Lycomings. Lycomings have no crankshaft feature that will sling oil to the camshaft lobes & most oil pump output has to flow over the relief valve which has no access to the heat of the engine. It would be interesting to find out how long it takes a genuine oil fog to develop, My guess is quite a while. Aeroshell 15W50 has the Lycoming-recommended additive to protect the cam during dry starts. It has served us well. The cam gets enough splash off the crank once the engine's running. It's coming off the sides of the main and rod bearings. Another factor is how long an engine has been sitting. A couple of days is one thing, but if it has been two weeks a few more drops of camshaft oil would have drained such that the need for preheat has to be greater. We hangar the airplanes every night at 5C. They start just fine at those temps, six days a week. It's when they sit out at -25C for a few hours that we have to get really careful, or for a weekend. They will need preheat if they don't fire and stay running really early in the attempt. With the frost and ice and snow around here they often need hangaring anyhow. We get the full 2000 hours out of them and could go another 500, easily. The compressions are in the mid-to-high 70s when they come off, and there's no metal in the filters. The secret, I suppose, is to run them frequently, and not for short 20-minute flights. And use the Aeroshell with the additive. We had some cam problems before switching to it. It costs more, but it costs less. Get the idea? Dan |
#12
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On Feb 2, 4:09 pm, Rip wrote:
According to Lycoming, an even bigger danger is that, at -10 deg. F, engine tolerances are such that there may be zero, none, nada clearance between important surfaces, like the crankshaft and it's bearings. The aluminum case shrinks more than the steel crank, and one start under those conditions will, not might but will, destroy the engine. Rip Here's Lycoming's take on it: http://www.lycoming.textron.com/main...ldWeather.html I don't see that they warn about destroying the engine. Damaging it certainly is likely if care isn't taken. The aluminum case shrinks at about twice the rate of the steel crank, but the crank's bearings are steel half-circle shells that are in crush (ends butted against each other) in the case bores. They will shrink at the same rate as the crank and prevent the case from binding the crank too much. Bigger danger in cold weather is running the engine too hard before the steel cylinder barrels have warmed up; the aluminum piston can expand enough to cause scuffing as the clearances disappear. Engine shops see that frequently enough. The two-stroke engines in ultralights are particulary fussy that way. IIRC: Coefficient of linear expansion of aluminum is .1244 units per degree F; of steel it's .0655. I'd have to look it up to get it exact. |
#13
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![]() Here's Lycoming's take on it: http://www.lycoming.textron.com/main...ldWeather.html I don't see that they warn about destroying the engine. It is interesting that Lyc only says to expect "minor" wear abnormalities with improper cold weather starting. That is pretty watered down compared to some of the gloom and doom stated here and elsewhere. Until somebody is prepared to take a shiny new engine, cold start it, and immediately tear it down for inspection, we may never know. Good Luck, Mike |
#14
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"Aeroshell 15W50 has the Lycoming-recommended additive to protect
the cam during dry starts. It has served us well. The cam gets enough splash off the crank once the engine's running. It's coming off the sides of the main and rod bearings." Dan - From what I have seen inside Lycoming engines (and that's not very many although they are all very similar) a small amount of leaking oil from crank or rod journals isn't going to impact the cam surfaces very soon after a really gooey & sticky oil startup. I suspect the cam is going to have to rely on the residual oil from the last shutdown, for some time - maybe even minutes for a difficult cold start - until an oil fog environment is established. Laying a crankshaft next to a camshaft & looking at the axial alignment of the two, The likely initial oil splatter patterns look to me like they would miss the cam surfaces. A really interesting test would be to cut a hole in the side of a junkable crankcase and examine the startup spray pattern. Obviously you are doing something right. We both use the Shell 15W50. I've run counter to one of your "secrets" though in that I've had a lot of short flights over 31 years to get to 1700 hrs TTSN on a still solid Lycoming O-320E2D, only being religious about oil preheats. Maybe the presence of residual oil is more critical - in which case the need for preheat would greatly increase for an aircraft sitting for a few days. Might that jibe with your experience? |
#15
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Mike Spera wrote:
Until somebody is prepared to take a shiny new engine, cold start it, and immediately tear it down for inspection, we may never know. Exactly. Just about everything you read on this subject is folklore and speculation. There is little data or scientific method. |
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On Feb 5, 8:43 am, Dave Butler wrote:
Mike Spera wrote: Until somebody is prepared to take a shiny new engine, cold start it, and immediately tear it down for inspection, we may never know. Exactly. Just about everything you read on this subject is folklore and speculation. There is little data or scientific method. It might be speculation but it's working for us. When there is a lack of hard experiential data, you go by your own experience, being careful not to make large changes. Many folks are scared to operate engines in climates vastly different from what they're accustomed to, and that's probably wise. It's not safe to assume that the thing will behave as usual. Dan |
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#18
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On Feb 4, 1:19 pm, "nrp" wrote:
"Aeroshell 15W50 has the Lycoming-recommended additive to protect the cam during dry starts. It has served us well. The cam gets enough splash off the crank once the engine's running. It's coming off the sides of the main and rod bearings." Dan - From what I have seen inside Lycoming engines (and that's not very many although they are all very similar) a small amount of leaking oil from crank or rod journals isn't going to impact the cam surfaces very soon after a really gooey & sticky oil startup. I suspect the cam is going to have to rely on the residual oil from the last shutdown, for some time - maybe even minutes for a difficult cold start - until an oil fog environment is established. Laying a crankshaft next to a camshaft & looking at the axial alignment of the two, The likely initial oil splatter patterns look to me like they would miss the cam surfaces. A really interesting test would be to cut a hole in the side of a junkable crankcase and examine the startup spray pattern. Obviously you are doing something right. We both use the Shell 15W50. I've run counter to one of your "secrets" though in that I've had a lot of short flights over 31 years to get to 1700 hrs TTSN on a still solid Lycoming O-320E2D, only being religious about oil preheats. Maybe the presence of residual oil is more critical - in which case the need for preheat would greatly increase for an aircraft sitting for a few days. Might that jibe with your experience? That would be wise. I wish someone would certify a simple preoiler for these engines. There's a system operated by an electric oil pump, but it seems to me that an accumulator that stored oil from the system while the engine was running, and released it via a solenoid controlled by the pilot immedialtely before start, would be better and lighter. It could include a small electric heating element that would warm the oil in it, and would inject oil into the galleries as well as into a couple of spray nozzles that would fog the inside of the case with the warmed, thin oil. Even better would be a drilled camshaft that would have small oil ports in the lobes, or even right next to the lobes, to get the lifter faces wet. Dan |
#19
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#20
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On Feb 5, 11:46 am, David Lesher wrote:
writes: That would be wise. I wish someone would certify a simple preoiler for these engines. I rather liked the idea of something that you stuck down the dipstick hole and oh, blew compressed air in, I guess; in any case spraying oil here there & everywhere... [Not to say it would work, but it sounds intriguing...] Hmm; how about a spiral shaft that you spin on a drill? The end dips into the pan.... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 The Lycoming has some of narrow slots in the bottom of the case under the camshaft, and below that is the oil pan. The idea is to keep engine vibration from throwing too much oil up into the rotating machinery, while allowing the oil flung off the crank to drain. The oil fog might have some difficulty reaching the camshaft, and cold oil won't fog much, anyway. Too much oil mist or spray overwhelms the oil control rings on the piston. They can't scrape it all off at the piston speeds encountered at higher RPM, and begin to float on it. The oil gets into the combustion chamber and is burned, making smoke, using a lot of oil, and carboning things up too much. It's just one reason worn-out engines will use more oil; the bearings get looser and allow more oil past them, which is then thrown into the cylinder. The oil pump is made about four times larger than necessary to allow for this increased flow as the engine wears. Early on, the excess is dumped through the relief valve back into the case, but as things get old the relief valve passes less and less until it's shut altogether, and now you'll see the oil pressure start to drop. Dan |
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