![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I was searching via Google for informational schematics, or even just
a written description, on Lycoming's fuel injection system because it's different from Continental's. I came across Lycoming's website in which a number of technical and informational articles reside. One of them http://www.lycoming.textron.com/main.jsp?bodyPage=support/publications/keyReprints/operation/leaningEngines.html discusses various mixture settings for their fuel injected engines. Here is item no. 5 from that article, it's a description of how to achieve "best power" and "best economy" when an EGT guage is available: 5. The exhaust gas temperature (EGT) offers little improvement in leaning the float-type carburetor over the procedures outlined above because of imperfect mixture distribution. However, if the EGT probe is installed, lean the mixture to 100oF on the rich side of peak EGT for best power operation. For best economy cruise, operate at peak EGT. If roughness is encountered, enrich the mixture slightly for smooth engine operation. ***editorial note*** If you do this (richen slightly from peak), the only place for the cylinderhead temperatures to go is up. Slightly to the rich side of peak on the graph described below is where the cylinderhead temps peak. So it would pay to be careful how much you richen from the peak setting, if the engine is running rough at that point. The Cessna 172 I rent has the EGT guage, but no CHT guage. So you can richen from peak and drone happily along not knowing that you are cooking the cylinderheads. This particular section of the website includes a nice graph, which, if you are familiar with John Deakin's "Mixture Magic" article, will look very familiar. It should because all fixed spark engines will show the exact same performance curves for things like EGT, CHT, percent power and BSFC. What was interesting to me is if you look at where peak EGT is occuring and then go down to the BSFC curve is, you will see that you have not yet reached the lowest BSFC. That doesn't occur until you've leaned a bit further. But then you would be **LOP**. Notice it does not take much additional leaning to get the lowest BSFC the engine is capable of producing. Here's the interesting part: At peak EGT, the cylinderhead temps are already starting down from their peak, and the downward curve is pretty steep once you get to peak EGT. Just a tiny bit more leaning and the cylinderhead temps dive down another full ten degrees, while the EGT has hardly gone down at all. While this is going on, the percentage of power is dropping off too, which is why economy cruise is slower than best power, of course. Lycoming finishes the graph with the following statement: "Textron Lycoming does not recommend operating on the lean side of peak EGT." Yet as their own graph shows, best economy is ONLY achieved lean of peak. What extremely interesting to me is that the difference between peak and lean of peak where best economy occurs is only a matter of a very few degrees EGT. Remember, when you are cruising at 60% power, you cannot hurt the engine no matter where you set the mixture control. You can't burn valves or cook the cylinderheads or cause detonation, it just isn't producing enough power to do that. Lycoming themselves recommends that for maximum engine life, cruise power should be limited to 65% and CHT's kept below 400 F. But since the instrument panel doesn't include a CHT guage, the only way to avoid high temps is to be way rich, or at peak EGT or below. Why Lycoming recommends against LOP operation is a mystery. MUCH cooler CHT's and less fuel being burned... what am I missing here? Does the engine run roughly at this setting? Only those who try LOP will know. Corky Scott |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... Why Lycoming recommends against LOP operation is a mystery. MUCH cooler CHT's and less fuel being burned... what am I missing here? Does the engine run roughly at this setting? Only those who try LOP will know. http://www.lycoming.textron.com/supp...ps/SSP700A.pdf sets out their case, at least for larger turbos. (I'm not suggesting I endorse it.) Another thing to bear in mind is that mixture distribution is imperfect in most factory engines. If you operate at a steep part of the power vs mixture curve, small differences in mixture mean large imbalances of power between the cylinders. That can't be good for the engine. The point of Braly's Gamijectors is to even out the mixture distribution so that the imbalance disappears. Julian Scarfe |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Julian Scarfe" wrote in message ... The point of Braly's Gamijectors is to even out the mixture distribution so that the imbalance disappears. They don't even out a power imbalance, they just make all the cylinders reach peak EGT at the same mixture setting. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Stan Prevost" wrote in message ... "Julian Scarfe" wrote in message ... The point of Braly's Gamijectors is to even out the mixture distribution so that the imbalance disappears. They don't even out a power imbalance, they just make all the cylinders reach peak EGT at the same mixture setting. Which likely produces a balancing of power, no? Also, IIRC, it leads to the piston achieving ignition at the optimal point in the stroke (at LOP??). |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tom Sixkiller" wrote
They don't even out a power imbalance, they just make all the cylinders reach peak EGT at the same mixture setting. Which likely produces a balancing of power, no? No. What happens is this - the engines have crappy, obsolete induction systems, by design. By crappy induction systems, I mean they deliver a different amount of air to each identical cylinder. Modern engines (meaning auto engines) don't have this problem because their induction systems are designed by people who understand fluid mechanics and model the air flow in the induction system, making changes until all cylinders have equal (to a reasonable tolerance) air flow at all normal operating conditions. This process doesn't occur in aero engines because their induction systems were designed decades ago, before CFD tools were generally available. I suppose they could be tweaked now, but there are two things preventing this - it would require changes in the design of the induction system, which would mean getting the FAA to recertify the engines, and neither Lycoming nor Continental have design engineers on staff anymore. The GAMI 'fix' for the problem is really a bandaid solution - instead of actually fixing the real problem, you measure the extent of it (with your all-cylinder EGT) and then change the bores of the injectors until the fuel distribution is off in exactly the same way as the air distribution. In fact, since both Lycoming and Continental make injectors with a variety of bores, you could do this yourself (though probably not legally). The problem here is that once you've installed the GAMI's, you STILL don't have equal power output on each cylinder. Each cylinder is getting a different amount of air, and the injectors make sure it gets just the right amount of fuel to go with that amount of air, so each cylinder produces a different amount of power at every stroke. The real question is - is that any worse than what happens in normal operation? A little. Remember, best power mixture is a little bit rich of peak. Let's say we leaned to peak on the leanest cylinder (meaning the one that gets the most air). Since it gets the most air, it should produce the most power. However, the other cylinders are a little rich of peak, and that compensates a little. How important is all this? Probably not very. After all, it's not like the cyclinders are firing simultaneously and we're depending on the forces of the power strokes to cancel out. Michael |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Michael,
The GAMI 'fix' for the problem is really a bandaid solution - instead of actually fixing the real problem, you measure the extent of it (with your all-cylinder EGT) and then change the bores of the injectors until the fuel distribution is off in exactly the same way as the air distributio That's not quite what GAMI says, IIRC. They claim the fuel nozzle specs from TCM and Lyc are so vague that the fuel delivered will vary widely between cylinders - and that's what's also evened out. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Stan Prevost" wrote in message
... The point of Braly's Gamijectors is to even out the mixture distribution so that the imbalance disappears. They don't even out a power imbalance, they just make all the cylinders reach peak EGT at the same mixture setting. Which they do by ensuring the same actual fuel/air mixture at a given mixture setting. Further, since the difference in fuel/air mixture at a given mixture setting plays a big part in the power differences between each cylinder, why wouldn't the Gamijectors help improve the power imbalance? Pete |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... Lycoming finishes the graph with the following statement: "Textron Lycoming does not recommend operating on the lean side of peak EGT." Yet as their own graph shows, best economy is ONLY achieved lean of peak. What extremely interesting to me is that the difference between peak and lean of peak where best economy occurs is only a matter of a very few degrees EGT. Corky, Isn't it also true that LOP optimizes the point in the stroke that the cylinder achieves the peak ignition point? Considering the wear on the engines moving parts that provides, maybe George Patterson is right, that they'd like us to buy new engines? :~) I also wonder how they are trying to cover their legal asses if they were spreading wrong (negligent) information for all these years, or merely just PP QC on their engines?? Tom -- "Flying an airplane is just like riding a bike -- it's just a lot harder to put baseball cards in the spokes" -- Capt. Rex Cramer |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 14:33:56 -0700, "Tom Sixkiller"
wrote: Isn't it also true that LOP optimizes the point in the stroke that the cylinder achieves the peak ignition point? Yup. I think what you are refering to is the Peak Power Pulse (PPP), which needs to occur at or about 16 degrees After Top Dead Center (ATDC). This is vitally important during takeoff as high temps and pressures inside the engine at that point can cause destruction of the engine. But during cruise, high temperatures can cause the engine to have a shortened TBO. I should make it clear I'm referring only to NON turbocharged engines in the information below. The situation is a bit complex and is also the result of aircraft engines having fixed timing. Since the timing is fixed, the only way to assure that the PPP occurs at the proper 16 degrees ATDC is by varying the mixture. The Fuel Air Mixture (FAM) burns more slowly on either side of the stochiometrically correct ratio of approximately 14.7 to 1 in mass. Takeoff power is where bad things happening cause BIG problems, so the engineers optimized the engine for this particular regime. Since the timing is fixed at 26 or so degrees Before Top Dead Center (BTDC), and the takeoff RPM is known, the speed of the piston is also known. The engineers calculated that in order to cause the PPP at 16 degrees ATDC, the mixture must be overly rich. The over rich mixture delays the PPP just long enough for it to occur at about 16 degrees ATDC. Why is it necessary for the PPP to occur there? Because at that point, the connecting rod has swiveled past TDC and the PPP is working to force the crankshaft throw downward. If the PPP occurs closer to TDC, the PPP cannot apply the downward force to the crankshaft, it has nowhere to go and heat and pressure skyrocket. If the PPP occurs BEFORE TDC, this is a worst case scenario called pre-ignition and assures the quick destruction of the engine. THIS is why running the engine rich on takeoff is necessary. The extra rich mixture doesn't keep the engine running cool by hosing down the cylinders, it keeps it cool by making sure the PPP occurs at 16 degrees ATDC. As I mentioned in a previous post, if there was a way to vary the timing on the engine, there would be no need to use an overly rich mixture for takeoff or any other time because the PPP could be kept at 16 degrees ATDC regardless the rpm or power setting or mixture. Well that's not really true, the mixture would still affect burn rate, but the timing could vary to make the PPP occur where we want it anyway. During cruise, the engine is slowed down. If you have a constant speed prop, you can slow the prop down, but it does not necessarily mean that you reduce the throttle. Deakin is an advocate of leaving the throttle full forward because as he quoted a friend of his: "I didn't buy a fast airplane to fly slow." So even though the engine is producing less power because it's been slowed down some, it's still making heat and now the pistons are moving more slowly. Because they are moving more slowly, the PPP is now occuring closer to TDC. If you lean out the mixture to something close to the ideal of 14.7 to 1, the mixture will burn as fast as is physically possible and the PPP will be very close to TDC. Physics is physics, even though the air is now pushing through the engine MUCH faster than was occuring during takeoff and climb, you can produce high cylinderhead temperatures by using a not quite lean enough mixture setting. This is what Deakin called the "RED ZONE" and he warns pilots to avoid mixture settings between LOP and Best Power. So he advocates either running the engine significantly rich of peak (in the best power zone), to slow down the burning, or leaning it past peak again due to the slower burning lean mixture. As we said, either side of ideal and the rate of burn slows down. Deakin is also leery of allowing cylinderhead temps to get anywhere near 400 degrees because aluminum begins to soften at that point. Lycoming does not worry about temps being that high. They recommend "400 degrees or below." Deakin strongly suggests not exceeding 380 degrees. So what Deakin is advocating is setting the mixture where you can fly the fastest for the best fuel burn and lowest engine temperatures possible. Note: LOP won't produce the fastest cruise speed, nor will it produce the best economy, but he feels it's the most reasonable compromise in that it for sure won't hurt the engine because the engine will be running cooler. Corky Scott PS, I am not an engine expert. I used to be an auto mechanic and am a lifetime motorhead but all the information above is from John Deakin's columns, and he got the information from Pratt and Whitney, Lycoming, Continental and GAMI and their test stand work. The information stands the test of critical review. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
What's Wrong with Economics and how can it be Fixed | What's Wrong with Economics and how can it be Fixe | Naval Aviation | 5 | August 21st 04 12:50 AM |
What's Wrong with Economics and how can it be Fixed | What's Wrong with Economics and how can it be Fixe | Military Aviation | 3 | August 21st 04 12:40 AM |
Power settings for 182RG | Andrew Gideon | Piloting | 19 | March 3rd 04 07:41 PM |
Cessna 404 Cruise settings | Katia | General Aviation | 0 | December 19th 03 05:04 PM |
Small Blue Planet Toys goes Postal !! Economy Shipping Options now availalble | Small Blue Planet Toys | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | July 11th 03 04:00 PM |