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#15
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"Dennis O'Connor" wrote in message ...
Either the prop governor, or the piston in the hub are going to hell in a handbasket... The engine 'stalls' when the prop goes into feather - I doubt that there is an engine problem... Sending the governor out for overhual immediately, would be my inclination... snip First off, there is a mechanical high-pitch propeller stop that should be engaged somewhere 1500 rpm and disengaged 1500 rpm. This stop enables feathering in-flight, but should prevent it at engine shut-down. This mechanism has rather obviously failed. How come across it in the past several times, typically the prop feathers AFTER the engine is shut down. Also, if everything is working properly, the oil pressure delivered from the prop governor to the propeller should keep the propeller against the fixed low-pitch stop during un-"governed" operation. As in, unless the governor is sensing the engine rpm is too high (prop pitch too low) and starts to dump governed oil pressure, the propeller should stay in the low pitch setting. If the engine is not supplying sufficient oil volume to the governor, governor will not supply sufficient pressure to the propeller. With the propeller feathering at low/no rpm, it must be inspected/repaired. Then the first step in diagnosing a strange "governor" problem is ensuring that the proper amount of engine oil is present at the governor pad. The tooling to accomplish this also makes it easy to check the prop oil supply path from the other passage at the governor pad through the front main bearing to the prop galley in the crankshaft. TC |
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