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#1
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I have an IO-360-A3B6 900 SFNEW in '97. I used to be able to keep about
7 quarts in it without it blowing out. Now it seems to be blowing oil down to about 5.5 quarts. Since I live in the 100F OATs part of the country, the extra oil really helps cooling. Should I worry about what is causing the extra oil blow out or just chock it up to an aging engine. I know some engines always blow out to 6ish quarts. If I shouldn't worry about the extra blow out I'll just put a separator on it, but I don't want to mask a problem first. One recent change is we raised the oil pressure since the regulator had been slipping prior to annual. -Robert |
#2
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Do a differential compression test and pay attention to
valve guides play and seals, often the oil is not being blown out the breather, but is leaking around the valves [even one valve] and burning. If you have high leakage during the differential compression test, you're getting too much blow-by and that is raising the crankcase pressure and blowing oil out the breather tube. If the breather is blocked, it will blow the main seal and you'll see oil behind the prop. If the oil level goes down fast and then stabilizes, you may have a dipstick that is not calibrated properly and you're over filling. The engine is old, nearly ten years, check all the seals and mating surfaces. You only have 900 hours, but that is less than 100 hours a year. Corrosion in the cylinders and blow by, and oil being sucked past the ring into the combustion chamber are all possible, Check valve guides and seals, differential compression and if available, borescope it. Higher oil pressure would increase the leakage, but not effect the valve guides or rings. An oil separator will only help if the oil is going out the breather tube. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... |I have an IO-360-A3B6 900 SFNEW in '97. I used to be able to keep about | 7 quarts in it without it blowing out. Now it seems to be blowing oil | down to about 5.5 quarts. Since I live in the 100F OATs part of the | country, the extra oil really helps cooling. | Should I worry about what is causing the extra oil blow out or just | chock it up to an aging engine. I know some engines always blow out to | 6ish quarts. | If I shouldn't worry about the extra blow out I'll just put a separator | on it, but I don't want to mask a problem first. One recent change is | we raised the oil pressure since the regulator had been slipping prior | to annual. | | -Robert | |
#3
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![]() Jim Macklin wrote: The engine is old, nearly ten years, check all the seals and mating surfaces. You only have 900 hours, but that is less than 100 hours a year. Corrosion in the cylinders and blow by, and oil being sucked past the ring into the combustion chamber are all possible, Check valve guides and seals, differential compression and if available, borescope it. Higher oil pressure would increase the leakage, but not effect the valve guides or rings. An oil separator will only help if the oil is going out the breather tube. The only place I'm seeing any oil is at the breather. I had a full prop/gov overhaul last year and they replaced the front engine seal. I wasn't having any problems with the prop, I had it overhauled because oil was leaking from the gov. Now I think I've got a clean enough engine that I can actually tell where the oil is leaknig from. -Robert |
#4
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You might see about plumbing in a pressure gauge to read the
crankcase pressure in flight, also, there should be a baffle to keep the oil from directly splashing on the breather pick-up. It is possible that the work that was done reduced the leaking from the crankcase [reduced venting] and it is now increased at the breather. If there is too much blow by, a top overhaul or perhaps just a bad cylinder needs honed and new rings. But a sudden change in the oil usage pattern is cause for more investigation. You see oil at the breather because it is not burned, but is atomized particles and vapor. But you can be burning oil because of bad rings or valve guide leakage and that could be masked in the exhaust stack. Check plug condition and the stacks should be chalky gray, not black or brown greasy. Have someone do a full power run-up and you look at the exhaust for color, oil smoke is bluish, excess fuel is black smoke. White smoke is a cold engine and water condensation, or a water jacket leak on a water cooled engine. see http://www.lycoming.textron.com/main...ons/index.html -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... | | Jim Macklin wrote: | The engine is old, nearly ten years, check all the seals and | mating surfaces. You only have 900 hours, but that is less | than 100 hours a year. Corrosion in the cylinders and blow | by, and oil being sucked past the ring into the combustion | chamber are all possible, Check valve guides and seals, | differential compression and if available, borescope it. | Higher oil pressure would increase the leakage, but not | effect the valve guides or rings. An oil separator will | only help if the oil is going out the breather tube. | | The only place I'm seeing any oil is at the breather. I had a full | prop/gov overhaul last year and they replaced the front engine seal. I | wasn't having any problems with the prop, I had it overhauled because | oil was leaking from the gov. Now I think I've got a clean enough | engine that I can actually tell where the oil is leaking from. | | -Robert | |
#5
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Excuse my ignorance, but how would valve guides, bad rings, etc cause it to
leak down to 5.5 quarts and then stop. It seems these causes would result in a continued loss as long as the engine was run. "Jim Macklin" wrote in message news:kaStg.67770$ZW3.1299@dukeread04... Do a differential compression test and pay attention to valve guides play and seals, often the oil is not being blown out the breather, but is leaking around the valves [even one valve] and burning. If you have high leakage during the differential compression test, you're getting too much blow-by and that is raising the crankcase pressure and blowing oil out the breather tube. If the breather is blocked, it will blow the main seal and you'll see oil behind the prop. If the oil level goes down fast and then stabilizes, you may have a dipstick that is not calibrated properly and you're over filling. The engine is old, nearly ten years, check all the seals and mating surfaces. You only have 900 hours, but that is less than 100 hours a year. Corrosion in the cylinders and blow by, and oil being sucked past the ring into the combustion chamber are all possible, Check valve guides and seals, differential compression and if available, borescope it. Higher oil pressure would increase the leakage, but not effect the valve guides or rings. An oil separator will only help if the oil is going out the breather tube. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... |I have an IO-360-A3B6 900 SFNEW in '97. I used to be able to keep about | 7 quarts in it without it blowing out. Now it seems to be blowing oil | down to about 5.5 quarts. Since I live in the 100F OATs part of the | country, the extra oil really helps cooling. | Should I worry about what is causing the extra oil blow out or just | chock it up to an aging engine. I know some engines always blow out to | 6ish quarts. | If I shouldn't worry about the extra blow out I'll just put a separator | on it, but I don't want to mask a problem first. One recent change is | we raised the oil pressure since the regulator had been slipping prior | to annual. | | -Robert | |
#6
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Probably, but there might be more than one condition working
on the oil loss. I'd look at quantity and baffling as well as crankcase pressure, but oil does strange things. There are dry sump engines that scavenge oil from the crankcase and return it to an external oil tank, these have two oil pumps, on to provide engine pressure and the other [larger pump] to remove the used and foamy oil from the engine. In all engines [modern designs] the oil that was sent to the rockers must be drained away back to the crankcase. If there is a blockage, it will pool and be more likely to be sucked past the valves. It is possible that the oil level seems to stabilize at 5.5 quarts only because the flight was terminated and the oil replenished. A sudden change in the pattern is what should cause alarm and investigation. If the airplane has a history of doing one thing and then that changes for no apparent reason, why is important to find out. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "soxinbox" wrote in message ... | Excuse my ignorance, but how would valve guides, bad rings, etc cause it to | leak down to 5.5 quarts and then stop. It seems these causes would result in | a continued loss as long as the engine was run. | | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:kaStg.67770$ZW3.1299@dukeread04... | Do a differential compression test and pay attention to | valve guides play and seals, often the oil is not being | blown out the breather, but is leaking around the valves | [even one valve] and burning. If you have high leakage | during the differential compression test, you're getting too | much blow-by and that is raising the crankcase pressure and | blowing oil out the breather tube. If the breather is | blocked, it will blow the main seal and you'll see oil | behind the prop. If the oil level goes down fast and then | stabilizes, you may have a dipstick that is not calibrated | properly and you're over filling. | | The engine is old, nearly ten years, check all the seals and | mating surfaces. You only have 900 hours, but that is less | than 100 hours a year. Corrosion in the cylinders and blow | by, and oil being sucked past the ring into the combustion | chamber are all possible, Check valve guides and seals, | differential compression and if available, borescope it. | Higher oil pressure would increase the leakage, but not | effect the valve guides or rings. An oil separator will | only help if the oil is going out the breather tube. | | | -- | James H. Macklin | ATP,CFI,A&P | | | | "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message | ups.com... | |I have an IO-360-A3B6 900 SFNEW in '97. I used to be able | to keep about | | 7 quarts in it without it blowing out. Now it seems to be | blowing oil | | down to about 5.5 quarts. Since I live in the 100F OATs | part of the | | country, the extra oil really helps cooling. | | Should I worry about what is causing the extra oil blow | out or just | | chock it up to an aging engine. I know some engines always | blow out to | | 6ish quarts. | | If I shouldn't worry about the extra blow out I'll just | put a separator | | on it, but I don't want to mask a problem first. One | recent change is | | we raised the oil pressure since the regulator had been | slipping prior | | to annual. | | | | -Robert | | | | | | |
#7
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It seems like I'm agreeing with Jim these days, I'd also say that something
is creating excessive case pressure. Along those lines I just tore down a horizontally opposed Kohler that was blowing oil from the breather faster than I could dump it in. It had blown a cylinder barrel seal, not a gasket, just an RTV seal. The key is that something caused the seal to blow. What did I find? Cracked exhaust valve guide that allowed exhaust pressures into the case. I think a valve wobble test and compression test could shine a lot of light on your problem. Jim "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... I have an IO-360-A3B6 900 SFNEW in '97. I used to be able to keep about 7 quarts in it without it blowing out. Now it seems to be blowing oil down to about 5.5 quarts. Since I live in the 100F OATs part of the country, the extra oil really helps cooling. Should I worry about what is causing the extra oil blow out or just chock it up to an aging engine. I know some engines always blow out to 6ish quarts. If I shouldn't worry about the extra blow out I'll just put a separator on it, but I don't want to mask a problem first. One recent change is we raised the oil pressure since the regulator had been slipping prior to annual. -Robert |
#8
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![]() Jim Burns wrote: It seems like I'm agreeing with Jim these days, I'd also say that something is creating excessive case pressure. Along those lines I just tore down a horizontally opposed Kohler that was blowing oil from the breather faster than I could dump it in. It had blown a cylinder barrel seal, not a gasket, just an RTV seal. The key is that something caused the seal to blow. What did I find? Cracked exhaust valve guide that allowed exhaust pressures into the case. Would that show up in a compression test though? I"m getting 79's all around in the compression test. The IA seemed impressed with the compression. Also, my EGTs seem to be running about the same. -Robert |
#9
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No, remember on a compression check your valves are closed, thus why I
suggested the valve wobble test. Not saying the guide is cracked, but it or they could be worn. I was just trying to keep the symptom (excess oil out the breather) separated from the cause (unknown) and relate what I had discovered. Let us know what you find. Jim "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... Jim Burns wrote: It seems like I'm agreeing with Jim these days, I'd also say that something is creating excessive case pressure. Along those lines I just tore down a horizontally opposed Kohler that was blowing oil from the breather faster than I could dump it in. It had blown a cylinder barrel seal, not a gasket, just an RTV seal. The key is that something caused the seal to blow. What did I find? Cracked exhaust valve guide that allowed exhaust pressures into the case. Would that show up in a compression test though? I"m getting 79's all around in the compression test. The IA seemed impressed with the compression. Also, my EGTs seem to be running about the same. -Robert |
#10
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![]() Jim Burns wrote: No, remember on a compression check your valves are closed, thus why I suggested the valve wobble test. Not saying the guide is cracked, but it or they could be worn. I was just trying to keep the symptom (excess oil out the breather) separated from the cause (unknown) and relate what I had discovered. If it were caused by a valve problem though would the oil still come out the breather? My engine seems extreamly clean of oil. I can see oil dripping from the breather. -Robert |
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