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Obviously not someone who is familiar with GAMI Injectors or the
Advanced Pilot Seminar where they have data to say opposite! Contrary to what the self proclaimed gear head states here, your engine should always be leaned when on the ground to avoid the fouling that gives you the roughness when one mag is switched off during runup. On Sat, 28 Feb 2004 10:37:00 -0500, " jls" wrote: When you lean your engine and rev it up on the ground you are super-heating the heads, the sparkplugs, the pistons, the valves, seats, and guides --- just to clean a fouled plug or two by burning the lead or carbon fouling off the electrode. It's best to clean the fouled plug. Of course, the problem is NOT with the mag. My instructor (who was not at all a gearhead) once did that burn-it-off thing in a 152's O-235 Lycoming, and it wasn't long before that engine was in the shop for new cylinders. I remember well the heat. We could feel it and smell it coming through the firewall, and being a gearhead I knew that THAT was not good for that engine. Besides, an aircraft revved up on the ground can hardly cool itself, irrespective of the fact you have leaned the **** out of it. I haven't seen it but have heard of burning holes in pistons by overleaning. By the mag drop you already know which set of plugs, upper or lower, and then all you have to do is find the misfiring cold cylinder. That's easy enough and what if the problem is a sparkplug wire or injector? You've just managed to fry your cylinders in the hopes of getting one out of four or six to fire. Leaning an engine takes a little finesse. It shouldn't be done on the ground unless you're in Denver or on a high-altitude ramp. A small fraction of that fuel charge is cooling your heads as it evaporates and flows through the combustion chamber and out the exhaust port. Ideally it is rich enough to give you a perfect stoichiometric charge plus just a little for cooling. If you burn it all by leaning you have lost your mixture's ability to dissipate heat. In addition, some of a lean charge is burning as it departs the combustion chamber because a lean mixture burns more slowly than a rich one. Damned if I want my exhaust valve to glow just to clean a sparkplug. |
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