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DAMN!
No, that's absolutely not normal. Poor workmanship at the rebuilder. There are bolts that should have been retorqued at a certain hour. The shop would have specified which ones. I really don't know of anyone who makes it a habit to check the torque on all the engine bolts at each annual. Things like exhaust studs hardware and intake bolts are checked. Understand this. If the case is fretting, as it does when bolts are loose, it's a very serious situation. If this were my engine, I would have another mechanic check the torque of the through bolts. If they're off you need to clean it up very well and run it for about another 1/2 hour on the ground. Do Not Fly This Airplane. If wet, the engine needs to be pulled and the disassembled, cases sent out and reassembled. It'll give you something to talk about, anyway. Don't take my word for it, contact a real engine house for advice and let the world know if I'm wrong. I seem to remember being strongly criticized after saying something about soliciting recommendations for a shop via the newsgroups when you did it a few years back. On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 21:25:10 GMT, "Jay Honeck" wrote: It seems to be the season for finding oil leaks. At our completely uneventful annual (just finished two days ago) I asked my shop to investigate a new leak that I had detected when I de-cowled the engine for the inspection. All across the top of our 3-year-old, 500-hour engine, down the seam where the case halves join together, right where the push rods attach to the case, was a puddle of fresh, clean oil -- enough to look like I had just spilled some while adding oil... Trouble was, I HADN'T added any oil recently. With our new air/oil separator, I no longer need to add oil between oil changes, so it had been some 24 flight hours since I had last added oil. With no obvious source of the leak, my mechanic thoroughly cleaned the engine and resolved to fly it to see where the oil was coming from. The flying weather wouldn't cooperate until today, but this morning we flew the plane on its post-annual test flight, found a squawk or two, and returned to the shop to fix these and check for the source of the leak. The total flight time was only 0.7 hours, yet the top of the engine once again looked like I had spilled oil while filling. It was right along the case halves seam, so with no other apparent source my mechanic figured the first place to start was to check the torque on the case bolts. He reached for the first one, and we were both astounded when he was able to tighten it -- by hand! One by one, all of the case nuts were found to be very loose (although that was the only one that was hand-tight), and needed to be re-torqued to 190 inch pounds of torque. After tightening those, he checked the prop governor housing, and found those bolts to be way loose, too. Essentially the whole top of the engine was loose, and oil was leaking at the seam. After re-torquing everything to spec, I test flew the plane for another 0.5 hours, and was happy to see everything bone dry once again. Questions: 1. Is this something one should expect after 500 hours of shaking and rattling? Do these bolts just plain loosen over time, going from hot to cold hundreds of times? 2. Do you guys re-torque these bolts on a schedule? 3. Is this something your A&P checks at every annual? My guys were clearly surprised to find these bolts so loose -- and they are the guys who rebuilt the engine. 4. Are there any other bolts -- say, on the BOTTOM of the engine -- that I should check for looseness? I looked but couldn't see any. 5. Should I apply LocTite to these bolts? I suspect I'll be checking those bolts regularly from now on! |
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