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#41
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karel wrote: Corky, This text must surely be most interesting and many people might benefit from understanding, myself not the least. Unfortunately it is so full of undocumented abbreviations that I can't really make much from it. MP must stand for manifold pressure I presume, and EGT and CHT are wellknown cause there's instruments for them but what the heck are ROP, ONLY, AMPLE, WOP, JIP, LOP ? Is there perhaps a glossary web page somewhere for this kind of terminology? KA (learning every day) I'll make a stab at translating. ROP -- rich of peak LOP -- lean of peak WOP -- I think you mistyped for WOT, wide open throttle JIP -- I think you mistyped for JPI, a brand of engine instrument. AMPLE -- emphasized ample, meaning enough to do the job, lots. ONLY -- emphasized only, meaning singular, just this part of the newsletter. Tim Ward |
#42
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In rec.aviation.owning kontiki wrote:
: My Comanche has an O-540 and at 22/23 I'm burning about 13 Gph with 100LL. : If there was an MOGAS STC for the Comanche I'd give it a try but that will : never happen. I talked with Petersen about the PA-24. It hydro-locks the carb and floods the engine, so no STC for it. Basically the opposite of vapor-locking AIUI... boiling fuel pressurizes the carb and forces liquid fuel out. That's different from vapor-locking where boiling in the lines prevents pumping and it goes dry. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#43
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: Detonation is NEVER a problem when the octane is correct. If the engine
: is designed for 80 octane, it will happily drink 80 octane mogas or : anything else that meets the minimum spec. The absence of lead in the : fuel simply means that there is less junk to scavenge out of the : combustion products. That's not completely true. Some engines are marginal on their rated fuel (in particular, fire-breathing TGSIO-ABC-XYZ-540's putting out 350 hp or whatever). Even some planes could be marginal on their rated fuel in the worse possible condition. For example, long climb, just under redline CHT, fuel at the bottom of the permissible octane rating, carb float/jets at the leanest possible configuration, etc, etc. The bigger variable is that autofuel does not use quite the same rating as avgas. Autofuel (in the U.S. anyway) uses an (R+M)/2 rating, or anti-knock-index (A.K.I). The point spread between the two is not published, but is generally about \pm 5 points, with the lower (motor) most closely similar to the aviation method. Basically, that means that 87 AKI autogas is probably about 82 motor, 92 research. -Cory ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#44
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On Tue, 10 May 2005 10:01:47 -0700, "Matt Barrow"
wrote: I hope to hell you cut and pasted all that, rather than typing it in by hand!! :~) You'd be right. Copy and paste. :-) Corky Scott |
#45
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Gene Kearns wrote:
Still in all seriousness: shouldn't there be a little glossary somewhere, perhaps in Ron W's FAQ list? I've a feeling I'm not the only one lost on terminology. What's a FAQ?........... ;-) LOL! ;-) |
#46
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: The autogas STC is undoubtedly the best thing that has ever happened to
: aircraft owners. If you've got the STC, but aren't using it, you are : literally flushing thousands of dollars down the toilet. : -- I agree on that. I will add one more datapoint to the mix here. We put the Petersen high-compression autogas STC on our Cherokee-180 (requires 91 A.K.I or better) about two years ago. Due to the difference in fuel ratings, I was concerned about detonation margin. We've got 93 A.K.I pump-gas here, which is what I use. Basically, that means the motor octane is probably about 88... less than the 91 the O-360-A3A was type-certificated at. I generally run at least 20% 100LL on the takeoff (right) tank, and 100% autogas on the left for local cruises. I've done enough local flying with long climbs, hot takeoffs, different mixtures, etc and haven't noticed any ill effects. I'm sure that you cannot forget to enrichen at *all* when operating on mogas, but I haven't had any issues. For the record, Petersen said when they did the vapor lock/detonation testing (in some ridiculously hot desert place at 100+ degrees IIRC), they couldn't get it to detonate on 89 mid-grade either. The FAA guys insisted on a little "safety-margin" and made it 91. On thing I did (rather accidentally) find out about that initially disturbed me. I shut down the engine with the mags after a flight (I just had to jump out and get something from my car and didn't want to have to prime it to start). It *almost* died, but started to diesel at a ridiculously low RPM (100 or so). Dieseling = preignition = BAD... BUT, the big problems are these: - Extremely low RPM makes for a *LONG TIME* (20x that of takeoff time) that the mixture is in the hot cylinders. It's got extra time to decide to light off. - Extremely low RPM makes even the idle throttle setting "full-throttle." The MP gauge said basically atmospheric (26-28"), even at idle setting of the throttle. Each cylinder gets a full-throttle gulp of mixture then which can slow-bake in the jugs. - Idle mixture is generally set for slightly rich (not super-rich)... best mixture for preignition. Concerned, I tried it in a friend's PA-28-150 running 87 autogas. Same thing, and that engine combo config is identical to Jay's... just 4 rather than 6. Nobody ever has had issues with octane on the low-compression engines. Anyway, I'd be interested to hear if you can do the same trick, Jay. I'm pretty convinced (due to the above reasons) that it's a non-issue for normal operation. Interesting, though. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#47
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In rec.aviation.owning Newps wrote:
: I can lean to that fuel flow without any undue engine sounds, too. But my : EGTs go well over 1500 degrees, and my CHTs push 350 when I do. : EGT is irrelavant and 350 is not hot. Exactly. The absolute value of EGT does not matter... almost all of the cooling of the exhaust valves is done through the valve seat (and stem in Lycoming). Thus, the "cold sink" is the cylinder, and CHT is what's important. Lycoming redlines CHT at 500, recommends 450 as a max, and general wisedom dictates anything under 375-400 in cruise is fine. Also remember that EGT and CHT probes are often uncompensated thermocouples. That means they read the difference between the "hot" thing, and the temperature of the "cold" (where the J thermocouple wires connect to the copper wires going to the meter, etc). They're generally set to be accurate at about 70 degrees F. If it's 0 F, the temp will read 70 degrees hotter than it actually is. Wintertime temps read higher for that reason. I don't know about the fancy JPI, etc, by my dumb gauges definately do this. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#48
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I've a feeling I'm not the only one lost on terminology.
Try being a non pilot trying to keep up with you guys! |
#49
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karel wrote:
Still in all seriousness: shouldn't there be a little glossary somewhere, perhaps in Ron W's FAQ list? I've a feeling I'm not the only one lost on terminology. KA (learning & learning & ....) Stick around. It'll get worse. -- This is by far the hardest lesson about freedom. It goes against instinct, and morality, to just sit back and watch people make mistakes. We want to help them, which means control them and their decisions, but in doing so we actually hurt them (and ourselves)." |
#50
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"karel" wrote in message ... "Corky Scott" wrote in message ... On Mon, 9 May 2005 18:44:11 -0700, "Matt Barrow" wrote: John Deakin has written that if you lean to the lean side of peak and the engine runs rough, pulling on full carb heat will distribute the fuel into the air mixture better and give you the ability to lean to the lean side of peak. Actually, he says "just a touch" of carb heat. That was his initial suggestion. In his next column he posted this as a news flash. I've posted nearly the entire portion of the column because he has some caveats that are important to understand: ***Begin Quote*** (quote snipped) ***End Quote*** Corky Scott Corky, This text must surely be most interesting and many people might benefit from understanding, myself not the least. Unfortunately it is so full of undocumented abbreviations that I can't really make much from it. MP must stand for manifold pressure I presume, and EGT and CHT are wellknown cause there's instruments for them but what the heck are ROP, ONLY, AMPLE, WOP, JIP, LOP ? ROP = Rich of Peak LOP = Lean of Peak WOP (WOT) + Wide open throttle ONLY and AMPLE are _emphasis" "JIP" I don't se in the article Is there perhaps a glossary web page somewhere for this kind of terminology? KA (learning every day) There's this http://www.gps.tc.faa.gov/glossary.html but much of aviation's charm is the acronyms we create every day :~) |
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