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A few weeks ago while flying through -17 degree C air aloft, I spotted what
appeared to be really a low oil temperature indication of the turbo-normalized, IO-520 engine in my V35. For a few moments, the oil temperature was around 125 degrees F. When I landed I contacted my mechanic, who verbalized that he suspected the oil thermostat (the valve that controls the oil flow into the oil cooler) was bad. In his experience, he stated that the oil temperature should be around 180 degrees F. After removing and inspecting this thermostat, he concluded that the valve was not seating properly and that most likely allowed oil into the cooler, despite the lower oil temperature. Thus, I authorized the replacement of it (it was under warranty). These days and with a new thermostat installed, I am only seeing oil temperatures of no higher than 155-160 degrees F while flying through air of +1 to +5 degrees C. Does this still seem low? BTW, I did share this observation with my mechanic and he called Tornado Alley (manufacturers of the turbo-normalized system). TA was not alarmed with the 155 degree F oil temperature. For some additional information, the oil cooler is located on the top of the firewall, directly behind the engine, rather than in the front. -- Peter |
#2
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I have a much smaller engine in my C-172. This is a conversion with a
Lyc O-360-A1A. I calibrated the temperature probe and marked the temperature when the indicator needle first came into the lower green (135F) then the point of 180F (the magic oil temperature). I can never get the engine to read 180F. It runs about 145F to 160F. This engine does have an oil cooler on it. Ross KSWI Peter R. wrote: A few weeks ago while flying through -17 degree C air aloft, I spotted what appeared to be really a low oil temperature indication of the turbo-normalized, IO-520 engine in my V35. For a few moments, the oil temperature was around 125 degrees F. When I landed I contacted my mechanic, who verbalized that he suspected the oil thermostat (the valve that controls the oil flow into the oil cooler) was bad. In his experience, he stated that the oil temperature should be around 180 degrees F. After removing and inspecting this thermostat, he concluded that the valve was not seating properly and that most likely allowed oil into the cooler, despite the lower oil temperature. Thus, I authorized the replacement of it (it was under warranty). These days and with a new thermostat installed, I am only seeing oil temperatures of no higher than 155-160 degrees F while flying through air of +1 to +5 degrees C. Does this still seem low? BTW, I did share this observation with my mechanic and he called Tornado Alley (manufacturers of the turbo-normalized system). TA was not alarmed with the 155 degree F oil temperature. For some additional information, the oil cooler is located on the top of the firewall, directly behind the engine, rather than in the front. |
#3
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Don't know about your engine, but on my Lycoming O-360-A4A the vernatherm is
an oil cooler bypass valve and when the oil is hot it closes to force all of the oil through the oil cooler. If it doesn't seat properly, oil leaks past the oil cooler and the oil gets too hot, not too cold. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel "Peter R." wrote in message ... A few weeks ago while flying through -17 degree C air aloft, I spotted what appeared to be really a low oil temperature indication of the turbo-normalized, IO-520 engine in my V35. For a few moments, the oil temperature was around 125 degrees F. When I landed I contacted my mechanic, who verbalized that he suspected the oil thermostat (the valve that controls the oil flow into the oil cooler) was bad. In his experience, he stated that the oil temperature should be around 180 degrees F. After removing and inspecting this thermostat, he concluded that the valve was not seating properly and that most likely allowed oil into the cooler, despite the lower oil temperature. Thus, I authorized the replacement of it (it was under warranty). These days and with a new thermostat installed, I am only seeing oil temperatures of no higher than 155-160 degrees F while flying through air of +1 to +5 degrees C. Does this still seem low? BTW, I did share this observation with my mechanic and he called Tornado Alley (manufacturers of the turbo-normalized system). TA was not alarmed with the 155 degree F oil temperature. For some additional information, the oil cooler is located on the top of the firewall, directly behind the engine, rather than in the front. -- Peter |
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