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#21
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RST Engineering wrote:
Just running down the list in my head, I am going to take the opposite position. Most aircraft have BOTH mags with an impulse; a small minority have only one with an impulse. Jim Most aircraft have only one mag with an impulse Not sure to whom you are responding. I don't see that exact text in my posting, but I did say something like that. ....but I defer to your greater experience. Dave |
#22
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I'm not saying I am right, just that off the top of my head without going
down the list with a pencil and paper, it seems that most (if not all) Cessnas from the 120 to the 210 have both mags impulsed, most Pipers also, and that is 90% of the fleet right there. However, I'm also willing to be corrected by my greasywrench colleagues who are more into engine work than I. Jim "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1116429660.228058@sj-nntpcache-5... RST Engineering wrote: Just running down the list in my head, I am going to take the opposite position. Most aircraft have BOTH mags with an impulse; a small minority have only one with an impulse. Jim Most aircraft have only one mag with an impulse Not sure to whom you are responding. I don't see that exact text in my posting, but I did say something like that. ...but I defer to your greater experience. Dave |
#23
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#24
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Almost all of the make/models that you mention below have an impulse
mag on the left side only. On Wed, 18 May 2005 09:00:21 -0700, "RST Engineering" wrote: I'm not saying I am right, just that off the top of my head without going down the list with a pencil and paper, it seems that most (if not all) Cessnas from the 120 to the 210 have both mags impulsed, most Pipers also, and that is 90% of the fleet right there. However, I'm also willing to be corrected by my greasywrench colleagues who are more into engine work than I. Jim "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1116429660.228058@sj-nntpcache-5... RST Engineering wrote: Just running down the list in my head, I am going to take the opposite position. Most aircraft have BOTH mags with an impulse; a small minority have only one with an impulse. Jim Most aircraft have only one mag with an impulse Not sure to whom you are responding. I don't see that exact text in my posting, but I did say something like that. ...but I defer to your greater experience. Dave |
#25
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Perhaps those Lycoming powered that came off the production line after the
service bulletin advising to make that switch, but prior to that date they were double impulse mags. Let's take just two examples with which I am intimately familiar, since I just did a mag rebuild on both of them. The Continental O-470L with Bendix magnetos has dual impulse mags. (Cessna 182 et al) The Continental O-300D with Bendix magnetos has dual impulse mags. (Cessna 172 et al) I suppose we can go down the list of every aircraft that was ever made and start a table. I'm not going to waste my time doing that. Jim "Bill Zaleski" wrote in message news ![]() Almost all of the make/models that you mention below have an impulse mag on the left side only. On Wed, 18 May 2005 09:00:21 -0700, "RST Engineering" wrote: I'm not saying I am right, just that off the top of my head without going down the list with a pencil and paper, it seems that most (if not all) Cessnas from the 120 to the 210 have both mags impulsed, most Pipers also, and that is 90% of the fleet right there. However, I'm also willing to be corrected by my greasywrench colleagues who are more into engine work than I. Jim |
#26
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"OtisWinslow" wrote in message
m... That's a good thing to pay attention to. You can also check it at idle before shut down by briefly turning the switch to "OFF" and see if the engine starts to shut down. Emphasis on "at idle", of course. ![]() |
#27
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To drum up business for A&Ps, via A.D. 78-09-07
![]() "Guillermo" wrote in message ... I was wondering what is exactly the function of the impulse-coupled magneto. I've read about them a little bit on the web, but I'd like somebody to explain it in simple terms. thanks guillermo "Tauno Voipio" wrote in message ... Greg Farris wrote: In article , says... Assuming just one magneto with an impulse coupling, the other magneto is shorted and the starter is engaged (by electrical relay, generally...I'm not aware of any airplane starter that runs the current straight through the mag switch). Note also that this is true only of systems that use an impulse coupling for starting. Of course, you could have just posted that information, rather than turning into a pop-quiz. ![]() Pete What's the logic of grounding the non impulse-coupled mag during starting? (Not a "pop quiz" - I'd like to know). G Faris The non-impulse magneto will fire earlier, if at all, and it may back-fire the engine, as the cranking speed is slow. -- Tauno Voipio tauno voipio (at) iki fi |
#28
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "OtisWinslow" wrote in message m... That's a good thing to pay attention to. You can also check it at idle before shut down by briefly turning the switch to "OFF" and see if the engine starts to shut down. Emphasis on "at idle", of course. ![]() Yes. At idle. And I should have added that if it starts to shudder and die don't turn it back on. When I do it it's just a brief switch to the OFF position and back on. |
#29
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Yes. At idle. And I should have added that if it starts to
shudder and die don't turn it back on. It WILL start to shudder and die if you turn it off, unless there's a bad P-lead connection or mag switch. You want it back on so you can shut the engine off with mixture, not ignition. I get really annoyed when students go to "Off" during the runup and mag testing. We try to get them to hold the key firmly, not by its edges, so that it won't inadvertently snap over to "Off" when they select "R." They almost always immediately turn it on again (instead of letting it spool to a stop and restarting) and the exhaust makes an almighty BANG and I have to look closely at that muffler and piping during inspections to find the cracks that often result. That was the big joke when we were young, right? Turn of the auto's ignition and back on again to get the big boom from the exhaust system. Doesn't work anymore with fuel injection. Saves exhaust systems, no doubt. Dan |
#30
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I get annoyder when they go the other way and grind the starter bendix. I'm
not sure which one is more expensive to fix. {;-) Jim I get really annoyed when students go to "Off" during the runup and mag testing. |
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