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Friday, one of my partners and I changed the oil. Afterwards, we took it up
for a spin to reward ourselves. As I rotated, I glanced down at the tach and was rather horrified. Redline on the Archer is 2,700 RPM. We were turning 3,300! 600 RPM over redline. Huh?! Since we still had the full length of both prop blades, the only logical explanations are either that someone put a different prop on in the dead of night, or that someone sneaked up and hopped up the Lycoming. We have to be getting 240 hp to see that much overreving on climbout. Wow. Thanks, phantom tuner. What a nice guy... Oh crap! The rate of climb isn't any different. We've ordered a new tach. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) |
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Is Andy Granatelli dead? Last I heard he was alive and living in
Montecito, CA. David Johnson |
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Friday, one of my partners and I changed the oil. Afterwards, we took it up
for a spin to reward ourselves. As I rotated, I glanced down at the tach and was rather horrified. Redline on the Archer is 2,700 RPM. We were turning 3,300! 600 RPM over redline. Great story -- thanks, Bob. Question: I can understand how a tach fails and shows "zero" RPM -- but how does it fail and show *higher* RPM? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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have the current tach calibrated before replacement.. those cheap hold in
your hand and look at the prop works pretty good. BT "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... Friday, one of my partners and I changed the oil. Afterwards, we took it up for a spin to reward ourselves. As I rotated, I glanced down at the tach and was rather horrified. Redline on the Archer is 2,700 RPM. We were turning 3,300! 600 RPM over redline. Great story -- thanks, Bob. Question: I can understand how a tach fails and shows "zero" RPM -- but how does it fail and show *higher* RPM? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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We did that a few weeks ago when it first started reading high. We found
that on the ground, it was consistently 10% high. However, in the air, particularly this time, it was reading considerably higher and bouncing around. I understand that one failure mode is for the shaft bearing to wear and let the rotating magnet touch the aluminum drag cup. When this happens it reads high and bounces around. Ergo, order a new tach. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) "BTIZ" wrote in message news:sTGrg.11095$6w.10302@fed1read11... have the current tach calibrated before replacement.. those cheap hold in your hand and look at the prop works pretty good. BT |
#6
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I guess he's still around. Sorry, Andy. Rumors of your demise are greatly
exaggerated. Perhaps I was thinking of Mickey Thompson or some such. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) wrote in message ups.com... Is Andy Granatelli dead? Last I heard he was alive and living in Montecito, CA. David Johnson |
#7
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![]() Bob Chilcoat wrote: Friday, one of my partners and I changed the oil. Afterwards, we took it up for a spin to reward ourselves. As I rotated, I glanced down at the tach and was rather horrified. Redline on the Archer is 2,700 RPM. We were turning 3,300! 600 RPM over redline. Huh?! Since we still had the full length of both prop blades, the only logical explanations are either that someone put a different prop on in the dead of night, or that someone sneaked up and hopped up the Lycoming. We have to be getting 240 hp to see that much overreving on climbout. Wow. Thanks, phantom tuner. What a nice guy... Oh crap! The rate of climb isn't any different. We've ordered a new tach. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) There are two different kinds of tach pick-ups for instruments. One is direct drive from engine to tach by a cable the other is electronic pick-up. If the engine sounds were the same I would think you have an indication problem. Have your local A&P use a calibrated RPM gauge and check you RPM this is the first test. It may be a bad cable, faulty electronic pick up or just a bad tach. You're A&P should know in short time what the problem is. Regardless have it fixed before the next flight. Stache |
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