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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... " jls" wrote in message ... 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. I think you are exaggerating. Yeah, I don't know if the exhaust valve glows or not but I know when one gets too hot and don't plan to let it happen to my engine. More than a little bit. I guarantee that even at sea level you are going to get spark plug fouling if you do not lean your engine somewhat during taxi -- especially when taxiing in. You just completed a descent with the mixture full rich and the engine idling -- lots of cooling and plenty of opportunity for spark plug buildup. I don't see any big problem with leaning as you taxi. We lean sometimes on descent and will often lean if an engine tends to miss or surge. It depends on the engine and airplane too. Leaning at idle, or close to it, as in when you are taxiing, won't fry your cylinders. But leaning at high static rpm's will, sooner or later. Thus the reason for TCM's advice not to do it. I suspect that the detonation and premature ignition that result from your recommendations are even harder on an engine than occasionally clearing a spark plug. Explain what recommendations I have given which will cause detonation and premature ignition. Fuel of the improper octane, engine hot spots, improper leaning and engine conditions I am generally opposed to cause detonation and preignition. See, e. g., http://www.sacskyranch.com/eng180.htm |
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