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Cessna 172 Oil Temp



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 25th 05, 06:04 PM
Darrel Toepfer
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RST Engineering wrote:

"A couple of months" tells us little about the number of hours. How many
hours on the engine since rebuild? What was done on the "rebuild"? New
rings (I hope), rechrome?

Darryl, I don't have my O-300 book handy, but as I recall when I overhauled
my engine the book recommended mineral oil for the first fifty hours.


About there or oil consumption geaux's down, which was what I was
eluding to. Some like to run a mixture of mineral and multiweight...

When I overhauled the 182 jugs and rechromed them, the oil temperature ran
hot for the first ten to fifteen hours, and then dropped like a rock when
the rings finally seated to the chrome.


Another thing is to make sure the blast tubes from the back baffle are
pointed at the oil screen and not bent and blowing elsewheres...

Whats your take on this "new" CO (Carbon monOxide) measurement
requirements at annual. Was our IA just extorting extra time/money?

http://www.faa.gov/avr/arm/arac/arac...nical3_all.doc
11. AC 20-32B, Carbon Monoxide (CO) Contamination in Aircraft -
Detection and Prevention.

Sec. 121.219 references ventalation requirements:
http://www.faa.gov/asd/international...%20Notepad.pdf
"carbon monoxide concentration may not be more than one part in 20,000
parts of air"

Page 15-6 just references what it can do to you in the Pilots Handbook:
http://av-info.faa.gov/data/training...83-25-4of4.pdf
  #2  
Old June 25th 05, 06:34 PM
RST Engineering
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Whats your take on this "new" CO (Carbon monOxide) measurement
requirements at annual. Was our IA just extorting extra time/money?

http://www.faa.gov/avr/arm/arac/arac...nical3_all.doc
11. AC 20-32B, Carbon Monoxide (CO) Contamination in Aircraft - Detection
and Prevention.


Which references standards for transport category aircraft.




Sec. 121.219 references ventalation requirements:
http://www.faa.gov/asd/international...%20Notepad.pdf
"carbon monoxide concentration may not be more than one part in 20,000
parts of air"


Part 121 is the section for air carrier aircraft.



Page 15-6 just references what it can do to you in the Pilots Handbook:
http://av-info.faa.gov/data/training...83-25-4of4.pdf


And they are correct, but hardly regulatory.

What is this CO measurement thing that you are talking about? Are you
saying that somebody has determined that a CO measurement is part of an
annual inspection on a part 91 aircraft? Not anything I've heard about, but
that doesn't say it didn't slip by me. Then again, you may have been part
of the mechanic's Hawaii fund.

Jim


  #3  
Old June 25th 05, 07:07 PM
Darrel Toepfer
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RST Engineering wrote:

What is this CO measurement thing that you are talking about? Are you
saying that somebody has determined that a CO measurement is part of an
annual inspection on a part 91 aircraft? Not anything I've heard about, but
that doesn't say it didn't slip by me. Then again, you may have been part
of the mechanic's Hawaii fund.


Yes. Which is what we figured too...
  #4  
Old June 25th 05, 10:04 PM
RST Engineering
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And I read in another thread where he wanted to "sniff for CO" with the
airplane at various angles to the wind?

Repeat after me very carefully ... Carbon monoxide is a colorless gas with
no perceptible odor.

Now it is true that CO is generally mixed with other exhaust gases which DO
have an odor, but that's not always true.

If the visual inspection of the stacks, the muffler and the shroud show
absolutely no evidence of exhaust gas leakage, tell me how in hell he
expected any gas leakage into the cabin?

Jim




"Darrel Toepfer" wrote in message
...
RST Engineering wrote:

What is this CO measurement thing that you are talking about? Are you
saying that somebody has determined that a CO measurement is part of an
annual inspection on a part 91 aircraft? Not anything I've heard about,
but that doesn't say it didn't slip by me. Then again, you may have been
part of the mechanic's Hawaii fund.


Yes. Which is what we figured too...



  #5  
Old June 26th 05, 12:37 AM
Darrel Toepfer
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RST Engineering wrote:

And I read in another thread where he wanted to "sniff for CO" with the
airplane at various angles to the wind?

Repeat after me very carefully ... Carbon monoxide is a colorless gas with
no perceptible odor.


Kneaux news there...

Now it is true that CO is generally mixed with other exhaust gases which DO
have an odor, but that's not always true.

If the visual inspection of the stacks, the muffler and the shroud show
absolutely no evidence of exhaust gas leakage, tell me how in hell he
expected any gas leakage into the cabin?


Commercial CO Monitor with a wand (rigid tubing) attached...
  #6  
Old June 26th 05, 12:54 PM
Mike Spera
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And I read in another thread where he wanted to "sniff for CO" with the
airplane at various angles to the wind?

Repeat after me very carefully ... Carbon monoxide is a colorless gas with
no perceptible odor.

Now it is true that CO is generally mixed with other exhaust gases which DO
have an odor, but that's not always true.

If the visual inspection of the stacks, the muffler and the shroud show
absolutely no evidence of exhaust gas leakage, tell me how in hell he
expected any gas leakage into the cabin?


He's sniffing for money... yours.

Sorry, I just had to get one in.
Mike
 




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