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Since the last time I had posted the question about the roughness between 1000
and 1700 RPM my wife had taken the plane on a cross country flight and claimed things seemed worse. Sure enough the roughness seemed worse plus the idle (below 1000 RPM) was no longer smooth. This time I brought my non-contact infrared thermometer to the field and checked each exhaust port as it idled. The whole right side was just over 400°F while the left two cylinders in the front were mid 200s. The #2 (left rear) was around 120. I sprayed carb clean around all the manifold joints (usually perks RPM when it finds a leak) with no results. I began to have doubts about the differential compression test so I did it again on the #2 cyl. Still 80/72. I thought maybe the pressure may have been sealing the ring so I did a cranking compression test and it showed as good as the other cylinders (125 lbs). Since I had just blasted the plugs I figured it was a billion to one that I got 2 bad plugs on the same cyl and a million to one on 2 bad wires. I had no choice but to proceed as though there was an air leak. I pulled off the left intake "tree" and inspected it for cracks along with the 3 hoses and the gasket on the oil pan joint. All good. I sprayed cleaner around the intake runner to head joint to see if anything would run down the inside of the runner and saw nothing. I was ready to button it up and look elsewhere when I decided to try spraying cleaner up into the intake runner (with the plastic pipe that comes on the can) and look for leaks on the outside. Gusher! Unbolted the runner and saw the gasket being sucked in on the back side of the runner in about the only spot I couldn't reach with the tube from the outside. Here is what threw me; it seems like at idle the whole #2 cylinder would shut down rather than stumble. I guess "smoothness" of idle is very subjective. That engine idles better on 5 cylinders than my 0-360 Lycoming does on 4. I also misread the manual where it said that best idle mixture should be about ¾ to one turn out from base on the mixture screw (I thought I saw one and a half out). The final setting is now about half a turn out, nearly one third of where it was. It was only a coincidence that it happened after I installed new rings on cylinders 5 and 6. Thanks to all for the suggestions. I should have been more thorough in the first place. Jim |
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#4
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the O-300
(been too long, don't remember) the carb is mounted on a "spider," an intake manifold that is held to the case by two studs and nuts I saw nothing like that on my 0-300 but I wouldn't be surprised at all about the possibility of 'sloshing'. Jim |
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