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I have owned this Cherokee 140 since 1994. I have logged over 1000 hours
in it through the original and the now installed overhauled engine. Oil temps were usually at 180 degrees (both engines)when OATs were between 50-80 degrees or so. It would read 1 needle mark higher when it got to be 95+ outside. In the last 150 hours or so, it has been drifting up and is now reading about 2 needle marks above 180 degrees (200 degrees or so?). I replaced the oil cooler because of age. It was cheaper to replace it with a new PMA'd unit than to have it checked/cleaned. I swapped the Vernatherm. No difference. Do the gauges/senders drift off with age. I am going to test the sender/gauge with hot water and a thermometer. Once it gets to that mark, it seems to stabilize. Baffles are all in good shape. What else causes temps to drift high? I know that shifting main bearings can cause this, but I doubt the engine would continue to operate for this long if this were the case. I do wonder though because the cold oil pressure is right at redline on takeoff. After 5 minutes it goes back down into the middle of the green. Thoughts/theories? Thanks, Mike |
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