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#1
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![]() Matt Barrow wrote: "Newps" wrote in message . .. Stan Prevost wrote: "Newps" wrote in message ... Neither is necessary. I have neither in my Bo, just a regular single point EGT. Mine runs great LOP. Yours may not without the GAMI's. How do you know you are LOP on all cylinders? I don't. Not necessary. Not necessary if you don't mind burning up one or two jugs? No such thing will happen. |
#2
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![]() "Newps" wrote in message . .. Matt Barrow wrote: "Newps" wrote in message . .. Stan Prevost wrote: "Newps" wrote in message ... Neither is necessary. I have neither in my Bo, just a regular single point EGT. Mine runs great LOP. Yours may not without the GAMI's. How do you know you are LOP on all cylinders? I don't. Not necessary. Not necessary if you don't mind burning up one or two jugs? No such thing will happen. It will if the leanest is LOP, but one is still ROP. |
#3
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![]() Matt Barrow wrote: No such thing will happen. It will if the leanest is LOP, but one is still ROP. I don't do that. |
#4
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![]() "Newps" wrote in message . .. Matt Barrow wrote: No such thing will happen. It will if the leanest is LOP, but one is still ROP. I don't do that. How do you know? Isn't that the point of a temp sensor on each and every cylinder? |
#5
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![]() Matt Barrow wrote: "Newps" wrote in message . .. Matt Barrow wrote: No such thing will happen. It will if the leanest is LOP, but one is still ROP. I don't do that. How do you know? Isn't that the point of a temp sensor on each and every cylinder? One of the reasons, yes. But at 75% or less you don't use it for that. |
#6
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That brings up an interesting point. I think the Lycoming recommendation
previously was 75% power for unrestricted leaning. Lately I have seen 65% as a recommendation. Anyone have any background on the two different limits? I've noticed in my O-360-A1A that certain RPM settings (about 2450 in my case) get a good EGT balance on all cylinders, and aggressive leaning produces RPM and EGT drops without engine roughness. Is this what the gami injected engines experience running LOP? -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel Macintosh - We might not get everything right, but at least we knew the century was going to end. "Newps" wrote in message . .. Matt Barrow wrote: "Newps" wrote in message . .. Matt Barrow wrote: No such thing will happen. It will if the leanest is LOP, but one is still ROP. I don't do that. How do you know? Isn't that the point of a temp sensor on each and every cylinder? One of the reasons, yes. But at 75% or less you don't use it for that. |
#7
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![]() Mike Noel wrote: That brings up an interesting point. I think the Lycoming recommendation previously was 75% power for unrestricted leaning. Lately I have seen 65% as a recommendation. Anyone have any background on the two different limits? I've noticed in my O-360-A1A that certain RPM settings (about 2450 in my case) get a good EGT balance on all cylinders, and aggressive leaning produces RPM and EGT drops without engine roughness. Is this what the gami injected engines experience running LOP? You have a carb, night and day difference. The key is to get all the cylinders to peak at the same time on the same fuel flow to each cylinder. In reality what people see is up to a .3 GPH difference across the various cylinders. Good enough. Keep leaning and you don't get the roughness because all the cylinders are running at the same spot. The roughness comes from one or more cylinders essentially missing and then really not running at all. I don't have GAMI's and I can run very nicely LOP. |
#8
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Mike Noel wrote:
That brings up an interesting point. I think the Lycoming recommendation previously was 75% power for unrestricted leaning. Lately I have seen 65% as a recommendation. Anyone have any background on the two different limits? Lycoming has always given recommended limitations on operations. 75% in cruise was always the common limit for leaning. Other documents have given lower numbers with the phrase "for maximum service life". Here's an example from a Lycoming Key Reprint article on leaning : 8. For maximum service life, maintain the following recommended limits for continuous cruise operation: a. Engine power setting — 65% of rated or less. b. Cylinder head temperatures — 400˚ F. or below. c. Oil temperature — 165˚ F. — 220˚ F. Available at http://www.lycoming.com/support/tips...Operations.pdf John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200704/1 |
#9
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Matt,
It will if the leanest is LOP, but one is still ROP. And the problem with that, at 75 percent or less power, is exactly what? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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