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Despite a very favorable service profile, careful preheating, and frequent
lifter inspection, the engine in our 172 N has fallen victim to the sudden lifter face disintegration that the Lycoming O-320 H2AD is especially prone to. Conventional wisdom is that his problem is the result of poor lubrication. There are certainly lubrication related problems with the cams and lifters in these engines but, after talking to a cam specialist and digging a little deeper, I'm convinced that this failure is not a wear problem. This issue has been around for a quarter of the history of manned flight. It appears to be random and a survey of owners I found on the web indicates that O-320 owners have a 50:50 chance of lifter face spalling in the first 1000 hours of operation. Since it appears to be a mystery and other people are already looking for Bigfoot, I've decided to start a page about it to collect information. I've started by putting all the theories I've heard and can think of down with my initial thoughts about them. Contributions are welcome either by post reply or direct email (preferable). I'll keep adding any good stuff I get. There is also a diagram of the Lycoming valve train and photos of damaged and disassembled lifters. The page is at: http://baldeagleflyingclub.org/Lifters.htm -- Roger Long |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
KitPlanes - Home Page by Ron Wanttaja | RobertR237 | Home Built | 40 | August 12th 03 10:17 PM |