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#21
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The intake cam lobe for the #3 and #4 cylinders failed and is worn down
considerably, hence the engine coming off and waiting for the crate. I've been following your engine woes with great interest, Ray, and not a small bit of horror. To say you are living one of my worst nightmares is not far from the truth, and I feel your pain. Does anyone *really* know what causes a camshaft to fail like this? I read about it happening with alarming regularity, and it's never attributed to anything in particular. It's always treated like an act of God, or like a weather phenomenon, rather than like the mechanical failure it is. And mechanical failures should have simple explanations, no? WHY did one of the cam lobes fail? Why didn't ALL of the cam lobes fail? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#22
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("Peter Duniho" wrote)
[snip] It seems to me that airframe icing is primarily an IFR issue, possibly of interest to people reading r.a.piloting, and hardly applicable to people involved in their primary training (the main audience in r.a.student). Jim (OP) has experience with people involved in their primary training. Weather is taught to VFR primary students, why not icing? "Clouds ......recognize and avoid!" "T-storms ...recognize and avoid!" "Icing ..........recognize and avoid!" Montblack |
#23
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Does anyone *really* know what causes a camshaft to fail like this? I read about it happening with alarming regularity, and it's never attributed to anything in particular. In the absence of some catastrophe, such as a bent pushrod, this is generally caused by not flying enough. The layer of hardened steel on a camshaft is fairly thin. Let the plane sit long enough, and rust will form. When the engine starts again, the rust is worn away, making the thin layer of hardened steel thinner. The worst wear points, of course, are the tips of the lobes. Once the hardened steel wears through, the softer steel underneath goes pretty rapidly. "So why not build the shaft entirely of hardened steel?", I hear you cry. That's because the harder steel is, the more brittle it becomes. The best strength comes from this sort of lamination of hard and soft steels. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#24
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There is also the fact that the oil pump is at one end of
the engine and the cam shaft lobe that fails is probably at the other [a guess] and the oil takes some time to reach the journal and establish a full oil bearing. Add a little sludge, maybe some cold oil and an over-revved engine, and you get cam lobe /journal failure or the lifter. Pilot error due to poor operation. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "George Patterson" wrote in message news:J11wf.517$sa4.41@trnddc07... | Jay Honeck wrote: | | Does anyone *really* know what causes a camshaft to fail like this? I read | about it happening with alarming regularity, and it's never attributed to | anything in particular. | | In the absence of some catastrophe, such as a bent pushrod, this is generally | caused by not flying enough. The layer of hardened steel on a camshaft is fairly | thin. Let the plane sit long enough, and rust will form. When the engine starts | again, the rust is worn away, making the thin layer of hardened steel thinner. | The worst wear points, of course, are the tips of the lobes. Once the hardened | steel wears through, the softer steel underneath goes pretty rapidly. | | "So why not build the shaft entirely of hardened steel?", I hear you cry. That's | because the harder steel is, the more brittle it becomes. The best strength | comes from this sort of lamination of hard and soft steels. | | George Patterson | Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to | your slightly older self. |
#25
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Add a little sludge, maybe some cold oil and an over-revved
engine, and you get cam lobe /journal failure or the lifter. Can you expand on that a bit, Jim? What, exactly, is an "over-revved engine"? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#26
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![]() "George Patterson" wrote In the absence of some catastrophe, such as a bent pushrod, this is generally caused by not flying enough. Whenever I see less than 200 hours on an engine in a year, it seems like there are tales of destruction of an engine to follow. All of this would not be nearly as likely (it seems to me) if aircraft engines were equipped with rollers on the cams. -- Jim in NC |
#27
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Whenever I see less than 200 hours on an engine in a year, it seems like
there are tales of destruction of an engine to follow. ??? That describes almost every privately owned aircraft at our airport. Only trainers routinely put on more than 200 hours per year. Mary and I fly more than anyone at the airport, and we just barely put 200 hours on last year. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#28
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Start with the throttle 1/2 open, zero rpm to 1800 with no
oil pressure. Etc. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news ![]() | Add a little sludge, maybe some cold oil and an over-revved | engine, and you get cam lobe /journal failure or the lifter. | | Can you expand on that a bit, Jim? What, exactly, is an "over-revved | engine"? | -- | Jay Honeck | Iowa City, IA | Pathfinder N56993 | www.AlexisParkInn.com | "Your Aviation Destination" | | |
#29
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![]() Whenever I see less than 200 hours on an engine in a year, it seems like there are tales of destruction of an engine to follow. ??? That describes almost every privately owned aircraft at our airport. Only trainers routinely put on more than 200 hours per year. Mary and I fly more than anyone at the airport, and we just barely put 200 hours on last year. Really? I would have thought you put far more than that on, per year. OK, then perhaps it is the frequency of being well warmed up that is the more important factor. I have always read that the moisture that is the killer, and when engines sit for more than a couple weeks, frequently, that the rust begins killing the internals. I wonder what the minimum time per year, and maximum frequency of running is necessary to keep rust at bay? Still, I think that only rollers touching the cams would be beneficial. I wonder how many kits have been designed to retrofit popular lycosaruses? -- Jim in NC |
#30
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"Montblack" wrote in message
... Jim (OP) has experience with people involved in their primary training. Weather is taught to VFR primary students, why not icing? Because they have enough to learn already? Seriously though, a primary student's knowledge of icing need not extend much further than "don't fly when freezing rain is forecast". For extra credit, a short discussion of what causes freezing rain might be called for. Most icing occurs inside a cloud, and VFR pilots should not have to worry about that, or anything else that might happen inside a cloud. But more importantly (and more to the point) the r.a.student newsgroup is more about the process of learning to fly, and especially as it applies to primary students, than it is about any random topic a pilot might be educated on. Here's the charter: It's been said that every good pilot is a student pilot -- for life. This group is dedicated to learning experiences and questions, particularly (but not exclusively) by and for those who haven't yet attained the private pilot certificate. Written exams, solo flights, learning to land, maneuvers, flight tests, instructors and instructional techniques, etc. Pete |
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