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Greeting to all;
I own a 1964 Cessna 182 with a Continental O-470-R25 engine. This is equipped with an E.I. 6 pt EGT gauge. Typical cruise power setting is 20" manifold pressure 2300 RPM. I seem to have a plug fouling issue. Can someone please give me the proper leaning procedure for both cruise flight and ground operations (taxing)? I'd really appreciate some experienced input. Thanks in advance! Jeffrey |
#2
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Are you running 100LL or mogas?
Jim I own a 1964 Cessna 182 with a Continental O-470-R25 engine. This is equipped with an E.I. 6 pt EGT gauge. Typical cruise power setting is 20" manifold pressure 2300 RPM. I seem to have a plug fouling issue. |
#3
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Running with 100LL.
"RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Are you running 100LL or mogas? Jim I own a 1964 Cessna 182 with a Continental O-470-R25 engine. This is equipped with an E.I. 6 pt EGT gauge. Typical cruise power setting is 20" manifold pressure 2300 RPM. I seem to have a plug fouling issue. |
#4
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Then you will have plug fouling issues with the O-470 for the rest of your
airplane's life. Jim "Jeffrey" wrote in message . com... Running with 100LL. |
#5
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RST Engineering wrote:
Then you will have plug fouling issues with the O-470 for the rest of your airplane's life. Bulls**t. I've put almost 500 exclusively 100LL hours on my O-470R with nary a single plug fouled. Happy Flying! Scott Skylane N92054 |
#6
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What's your technique Scott?
"Scott Skylane" wrote in message ... RST Engineering wrote: Then you will have plug fouling issues with the O-470 for the rest of your airplane's life. Bulls**t. I've put almost 500 exclusively 100LL hours on my O-470R with nary a single plug fouled. Happy Flying! Scott Skylane N92054 |
#7
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In article ,
Scott Skylane wrote: RST Engineering wrote: Then you will have plug fouling issues with the O-470 for the rest of your airplane's life. Bulls**t. I've put almost 500 exclusively 100LL hours on my O-470R with nary a single plug fouled. Same here....around 800 hours and no fouling problems. Usually leaned on the ground. Leaned at cruise regardless of altitude. Had an EI engine scanner/monitor with 6 leads EGT/CHT. -- Dale L. Falk There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing around with airplanes. http://home.gci.net/~sncdfalk/flying.html |
#8
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Jeffrey,
Typical cruise power setting is 20" manifold pressure 2300 RPM. Wow! Why so low? Can someone please give me the proper leaning procedure for both cruise flight and ground operations (taxing)? For taxi: lean right after start-up and stabilized RPM very aggresively until a slight rise in RPM occurs. If you lean any further, the engine should quit. The RPM rise should be around 25 RPM. If it is higher, have your idle mixture adjusted. If you advance the throttle for the mag check, the engine will stumble because it is so lean. That's GOOD because it reminds you to enrichen again for take-off power. You cannot hurt the engine by leaning at taxi power. For flight: Lean whenever the power is below 75 percent. Lean until the first cylinder peaks (that's not identical with the cylinder having the highest EGT, it is the first cylinder whose EGT goes down again during leaning). Then leave the mixture there if the engine runs smoothly or enrichen until abojut 100 F rich of peak. Have you read John Deakin's columns on engine management at www.avweb.com? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#9
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One reason and one reason only. With anything but a direct headwind, this
will get the fuel consumption down below 10 gallons of $3.50 fuel an hour. Jim 20" and 2200. "Thomas Borchert" wrote in message ... Jeffrey, Typical cruise power setting is 20" manifold pressure 2300 RPM. Wow! Why so low? |
#10
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RST,
One reason and one reason only. With anything but a direct headwind, this will get the fuel consumption down below 10 gallons of $3.50 fuel an hour. Jim 20" and 2200. If it's any help, I'm paying 7.75. However, your trip time will be much longer. You'll reach hour-based maintenance intervals sooner, too. Are you sure you're saving money on this? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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