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#21
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On Wed, 14 Apr 2004 22:36:41 -0700, "kage"
wrote: Even John Deakin burned out a set of Continental cylinders in 500 hours LOP in his Bonanza. And their highly touted fuel savings are, for the most part, due to a decrease in speed. You know, all that drag increase with V squared. I'd hesitate to speak for Mr. Deakin but I'd venture that he'd disagree violently that running lean of peak burned out his cylinders. Since running lean of peak results in low temperatures and less gas being burned, how exactly did they get burned out? To demonstrate that running lean of peak does not necessarily mean a lost of power, his "Mixture Magic" column showed a color photo of an instrument panel of a Cessna 410 running one engine ROP and the other LOP. Both engines were producing exactly the same power but at different manifold pressures. The LOP engine was using less fuel and was running at lower CHT temps. How is that bad? CHTs are just fine ROP. Actually they aren't, if you set the engine according to the POH. Running at 75% or 80% power and set 50 degrees ROP, the CHT's run above 400 degrees. These are figures that come from Lycoming and Continental. And yet over 400 degrees is where aluminum begins to loose strength. Deakin also was able to demonstrate that at certain POH dictated ROP settings, the cylinders actually distorted from the heat and began to scuff the pistons. This was during flight testing with several proprietary probes installed in his engine which could read what was happening in areas away from the cylinderhead probe. While these probes were showing alarming increases in heat, the cylinderhead readings read normal. He had to terminate the testing at those settings because the readings at the bases of the cylinders were rapidly rising, indicating that the pistons were beginning to scuff. Engines run clean enough ROP. Engine stresses have been doing just fine now for 100 years ROP. CO is not a problem in maintained exhaust systems. Airplanes fly faster ROP. Not necessarily. Same rpm, same airspeed but higher manifold pressure at the LOP settings equals the same cruise speed. Yes, if you want to fly at best power, you should be running ROP. Even the LOP diehards admit engines run smoother ROP. Gamis have more value in a turbocharged engine. Once again, not necessarily. Once the GAMI injectors are installed, Deakin has been able to lean right to the point of having the engine quit due to a mixture too lean to fire, without any roughness at all. If there's roughness then the injectors are not matched properly. Corky Scott |
#22
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![]() For a given power setting, in general (module altitude effects), there are two mixture settings to give that power. One ROP, the other LOP. If you run at, say, 70% power, your airspeed is going to be fixed at a particular level, assuming stable, level flight. If you run LOP, you run less fuel through the engine, and you burn all of it up. If you turn ROP, you use some of it to cool the engine -- using more fuel than LOP operation. All this for the same speed. Only at very low altitudes. Get YOUR facts straight. LOP is worthless at altitude because you simply cannot push enough gas through the engine to develop any meaningful horsepower, unless, like I said, you are turbocharged. What CHT level do you think is "just fine"? How does this argue in favor of ROP? For decades we were running ROP and there were no casualties from high CHTs. I ran several IO520s to overhaul in the 70's without any premature cylinder pulls. Engines run clean enough ROP. Your data is unsupported, not mine. There are, and never were prolems with Cont/Lyc running "dirty." Where is YOUR data to assert this. You are pulling this out of thin air. Lack of experience and GAMI propaganda here. Engine stresses have been doing just fine now for 100 years ROP. Oh? Have you ever examined the operations of round engines, especially the bigger things like R-3350s? IIRC, LOP operations were mandatory to get satisfactory performance and engine life. So what? We are talking Walter here, GAMI----remember. They don't make injectors for R-3350s CO is not a problem in maintained exhaust systems. What does that have to do with the decision? LOP makes less CO; isn't that a positive? No. Not necessarily. Where is your data, as you like to say, that this is positive? You aren't some tree hugger are you? Airplanes fly faster ROP. That claim is especially brown and smelly, given the orifice it was pulled from. See discussion above. Speed is all about power levels. Impossible to pull sufficient power at any reasonable higher altitude without a turbo. Try running LOP at 10,000 ft. Look at your charts(worthless LOP) at 10,000 and show me how much power/speed you are making. Even the LOP diehards admit engines run smoother ROP. As opposed to the ROP blowhards who can't abide admitting they might be wrong? See! I can use cheap rhetorical devices, too! Would you care to try a logical approach, or are you just interested in being fanatical? Again you don't even make a point. Smoother is smoother, period. Gamis have more value in a turbocharged engine. What does this have to do with deciding to operate LOP? Or are you just trying to obfuscate with more irrelevancies? Turbo engines benefit from LOP because they can still pull the necessary power to run at altitude. You really should get some facts straight about available power at altitude LOP. And, I have plenty of dirt under my nails, thank you for asking. Do you have real qualifications to back up your amazing assertions? How about real data? Sound logical reasoning? This is Usenet. You have shown me NO logical reasoning. Only GAMI claims. Cooler, cleaner, less stress----irrelevant! Get some experience and check back in. |
#23
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![]() wrote in message ... On Wed, 14 Apr 2004 22:36:41 -0700, "kage" wrote: To demonstrate that running lean of peak does not necessarily mean a lost of power, his "Mixture Magic" column showed a color photo of an instrument panel of a Cessna 410 running one engine ROP and the other LOP. Both engines were producing exactly the same power but at different manifold pressures. The LOP engine was using less fuel and was running at lower CHT temps. How is that bad? Uh, what's a Cessna 410? Is it the predecessor to the 411 with an TCM GTSIO-520-M engine? Allen |
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On Thu, 15 Apr 2004 19:32:39 GMT, "Allen"
wrote: Uh, what's a Cessna 410? Is it the predecessor to the 411 with an TCM GTSIO-520-M engine? Allen Sorry, working on memory from the article. It was a Cessna 414. See http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182084-1.html Corky Scott |
#25
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If you lean slowly in your 172N to rough, then slowly enrich until just
smooth -- where do you wind up with regard to EGT? I'm going to try and trace my thought processes back here because I think a lot of 4 banger, fixed pitch pilots are still flying the way I have at various times. I started out without an EGT knowing only that leaner was hotter, too lean made the engine rough, and too hot would burn the valves. I also didn't really believe that the engine would restart if I leaned so much that it quit. A CFI would have done me a big favor by showing me that you could lean it until it was producing almost no power and then bring it back again. So, I would carefully turn the mixture listening intently for the slightest change in engine sound (Is that rough?) I was afraid to ever lean it enough to learn what rough actually sounded like. Carefully doesn't mean slowly. New pilots tend to do everything like this quickly because they look up to find themselves 200 feet off altitude if they don't. The care was in jumping like a rabbit back to richer from the slightest burble in the exhaust sound. I know from later flying with the EGT that this method was putting me about 50 - 75 ROP. After I took over as maintenance officer, I had the EGT probe tested and it was working. The gauge had never been adjusted so it was off scale most of the time. I leaned and looked at the gauge and it didn't seem to react so I just ignored it for another couple of years. Then I learned two new things. You can't hurt the engine at 75% power with any mixture setting and these engines, which were not designed to burn 100LL, need to be really leaned to avoid plug and valve stem fouling. This prompted me to dig out and read through the stuff that came with the Alcor EGT gauge. I'd heard about LOP by this time but thought it was only for GAMI customers. I also went out and calibrated the EGT according to the POH supplement which, along with some patience, suddenly made it a usable instrument. I was still focused on plug fouling so I leaned to peak and then back 50 degrees to cover the spread in FA ratios and make sure none of the uninstrumented cylinders were in the "dangerous" LOP zone. So, I was still flying the same way but with an EGT gauge. The information that carb heat helps to even out mixture distribution was coming to light just about the time our plane went down for a three month refit so it was a frustrating winter. Here's what I know now. If you keep leaning our engine with carb heat off, it does not get steadily rougher from the first change in engine sound that used to spook me into giving the mixture knob a couple turns back. You can keep going to peak and a little beyond with little change. Jumping back from the first flaw in smoothness was the mistake I'd been making for years. It's noticeably rough by peak though. Lean it really smooth again and you'll wind up about 50 ROP. Now put on the carb heat and forget about roughness, lean it until it really sags and slowly turn the mixture in. With WOT or close to it, the engine will settle down to about the same power output and roughness as it had at 25 - 50 ROP without carb heat but CHT will be 15 - 25 degrees lower. With the ROP operation, the throttle would be pulled back farther to keep the power in the 60 - 75% range but RPM, not throttle position is the measure of power output. (For fixed pitch, anyway). This is clearly only going to work in the lower half of our 172's service ceiling but that's where a lot of our flying is done. There are also a lot of subtle factors that effect mixture distribution. It would not surprise me a bit if another O-320 H2AD in a 172N didn't have good enough mixture distribution to make this work. I also don't think you can do it cookbook style. I suspect you have to go through the fiddling stage, trying different amounts of carb heat and learning the way the engine sounds and reacts at different points. After that, it should be easier. I'm still learning about it which is why I'm curious what kind of experience other simple engine fliers have if they try it (as opposed to just pontificating about it). -- Roger Long |
#26
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![]() wrote in message ... On Wed, 14 Apr 2004 22:36:41 -0700, "kage" wrote: Even John Deakin burned out a set of Continental cylinders in 500 hours LOP in his Bonanza. And their highly touted fuel savings are, for the most part, due to a decrease in speed. You know, all that drag increase with V squared. I'd hesitate to speak for Mr. Deakin but I'd venture that he'd disagree violently that running lean of peak burned out his cylinders. Since running lean of peak results in low temperatures and less gas being burned, how exactly did they get burned out? I addressed Kage's comments to Deakin and he responded in a private email. You're completely right that Deakin disagrees...well, vehemently. |
#27
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On Thu, 15 Apr 2004 22:34:24 GMT, "Roger Long"
om wrote: If you lean slowly in your 172N to rough, then slowly enrich until just smooth -- where do you wind up with regard to EGT? I'm going to try and trace my thought processes back here because I think a lot of 4 banger, fixed pitch pilots are still flying the way I have at various times. I also don't think you can do it cookbook style. I suspect you have to go through the fiddling stage, trying different amounts of carb heat and learning the way the engine sounds and reacts at different points. After that, it should be easier. I'm still learning about it which is why I'm curious what kind of experience other simple engine fliers have if they try it (as opposed to just pontificating about it). Interesting and educational story. It is clear that, in your engine, following Lycoming's recommendations does result in running 50°F ROP. That may not be what L intended, but that surely seems to be the result. I, too, was never taught to properly lean. And I probably didn't really learn to do it correctly until I'd owned my own airplane for five or ten years (or maybe longer). There were a number of Mooniacs who were recommending leaning to 50° rich for best power. In retrospect, although I probably was aiming for that, I was likely a lot richer due to making the adjustments too quickly. But my "mature" Mooney would never show cruise CHT's much above 325°; and my engine problems necessitating early O/H have not been related to leaning. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
#28
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If you recall, I said Deakin burned out his cylinders despite his GAMIs, not
because of them. GAMIs will never correct Continentals poor build quality and crummy warranty service. All the hype that GAMI puts out about cooler, cleaner, peak pressure etc. doesn't do a thing for longevity of junk. See Deakin's cylinders, for example. And if you need to privately discuss this with Deakin, at least get your "facts" straight. Plus, go get some aviation experience so you can have something to offer Usenet besides poor manners. Best, Get a brain and start using it. "Tom Sixkiller" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... On Wed, 14 Apr 2004 22:36:41 -0700, "kage" wrote: Even John Deakin burned out a set of Continental cylinders in 500 hours LOP in his Bonanza. And their highly touted fuel savings are, for the most part, due to a decrease in speed. You know, all that drag increase with V squared. I'd hesitate to speak for Mr. Deakin but I'd venture that he'd disagree violently that running lean of peak burned out his cylinders. Since running lean of peak results in low temperatures and less gas being burned, how exactly did they get burned out? I addressed Kage's comments to Deakin and he responded in a private email. You're completely right that Deakin disagrees...well, vehemently. |
#29
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Hey Charles,
If your reading is better than your Cessna model number knowledge, be aware that I've always maintained GAMIs and Turbo engines are a good deal. A Cessna 410(sic) is turbocharged. For normally aspirated engines, however, their benefit is greatly diminished by the FACT that LOP reduces power, especially where you need it most---at cruise at altitude. *****Once again, not necessarily. Once the GAMI injectors are installed, Deakin has been able to lean right to the point of having the engine quit due to a mixture too lean to fire, without any roughness at all. If there's roughness then the injectors are not matched properly.***** That is just simply incorrect. There is roughness that anyone, including Deakin and Braly notice. It has nothing to do with the injectors being mismatched. It has everything to do with the need for the engine's timing to be adjustable. LOP REQUIRES the timing to be further advanced. GAMI knows this, and is the reason they are developing their Prism system of engine management. Best, And wrote in message ... On Wed, 14 Apr 2004 22:36:41 -0700, "kage" wrote: Even John Deakin burned out a set of Continental cylinders in 500 hours LOP in his Bonanza. And their highly touted fuel savings are, for the most part, due to a decrease in speed. You know, all that drag increase with V squared. I'd hesitate to speak for Mr. Deakin but I'd venture that he'd disagree violently that running lean of peak burned out his cylinders. Since running lean of peak results in low temperatures and less gas being burned, how exactly did they get burned out? To demonstrate that running lean of peak does not necessarily mean a lost of power, his "Mixture Magic" column showed a color photo of an instrument panel of a Cessna 410 running one engine ROP and the other LOP. Both engines were producing exactly the same power but at different manifold pressures. The LOP engine was using less fuel and was running at lower CHT temps. How is that bad? CHTs are just fine ROP. Actually they aren't, if you set the engine according to the POH. Running at 75% or 80% power and set 50 degrees ROP, the CHT's run above 400 degrees. These are figures that come from Lycoming and Continental. And yet over 400 degrees is where aluminum begins to loose strength. Deakin also was able to demonstrate that at certain POH dictated ROP settings, the cylinders actually distorted from the heat and began to scuff the pistons. This was during flight testing with several proprietary probes installed in his engine which could read what was happening in areas away from the cylinderhead probe. While these probes were showing alarming increases in heat, the cylinderhead readings read normal. He had to terminate the testing at those settings because the readings at the bases of the cylinders were rapidly rising, indicating that the pistons were beginning to scuff. Engines run clean enough ROP. Engine stresses have been doing just fine now for 100 years ROP. CO is not a problem in maintained exhaust systems. Airplanes fly faster ROP. Not necessarily. Same rpm, same airspeed but higher manifold pressure at the LOP settings equals the same cruise speed. Yes, if you want to fly at best power, you should be running ROP. Even the LOP diehards admit engines run smoother ROP. Gamis have more value in a turbocharged engine. Once again, not necessarily. Once the GAMI injectors are installed, Deakin has been able to lean right to the point of having the engine quit due to a mixture too lean to fire, without any roughness at all. If there's roughness then the injectors are not matched properly. Corky Scott |
#30
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Hi Corky,
Even John Deakin burned out a set of Continental cylinders in 500 hours LOP in his Bonanza. And their highly touted fuel savings are, for the most part, due to a decrease in speed. You know, all that drag increase with V squared. I'd hesitate to speak for Mr. Deakin but I'd venture that he'd disagree violently that running lean of peak burned out his cylinders. Even if it did - Mr. Deakin is one of the key people in developing LOP operations for today's GA Piston Aircraft. I guess he did experiment a bit with it before getting it right. However I fully agree: If done right running LOP puts less (thermal) stress on the engine and is certainly not going to "burn out" cylinders. regards, Friedrich -- please remove entfernen from my adress for personal email |
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