SHIPCHIEF wrote:
You didn't show the inside top of the top cowl. The inlet opening should have a flow diffuser from the upper lip back up to the top of the cowl. A ramp at the top. This divergent duct causes a laminar expanding flow that converts inlet velocity into pressure. You need the pressure to push the turbulent air down thru the cooling fins.
I didn't know what pics you needed and it appears I have them all turned sideways. I'll get the extra pictures and post again. As for the upper lip, the fiberglass curves in from the top a few inches pointing upwards and aft towards the top of the cowl. I think that's what you were asking. I'll get a picture of it tomorrow when I pull the cowl apart again to check the tappet adjustments.
SHIPCHIEF wrote:
Do you have a baffle seal from the lower cowl inlet lip over the top of the front cylinder shelf baffle? It would seal air to assure it goes thru the cylinders and does not bypass right down under the engine.
I do not have any seal from that point. I guess the extra seal I have left I could make one. It appears riveting it to the fiberglass would be the best option then it resting on the top of the baffling shelf although I don't like putting extra holes into fiberglass since it tends to work its way through. It seems like riveting that to the baffle shelf would still allow it to be pushed down by air. I think if I extended the shelf a little with aluminum sheet metal so it's fully under the front lower lip would reduce this issue. What do you think about that?
SHIPCHIEF wrote:
I'm thinking your side air exits are too small. I would see if they could be stretched out a little by putting a shim plate under the feet of the space bars. Or cut the tubes and spread them with a rod inside or something. Just get those openings to bow out a bit more for a test. Maybe I don't understand how that part is made, but the strap next to the fuselage looks like it should be bent inboard as it goes forward to help form an exit nozzle, and maybe it already is.
The only issue with spreading them wider is the fact that the cowl is only a certain width. If I spaced it out further I don't think my screw holes will line up because my top cowl sheet metal wouldn't extend further out. I could probably space them a little for a test but I'm not sure I could get more than a couple washers between the cowl and the bar. On the fuselage there is a sheet metal flap that extends 2-2.5" into the engine bay and is curved inboard. I think that's what you were asking about. So it funnels the air into the side outlets. I can get better pics of this with the cowl off for you.
SHIPCHIEF wrote:
The air outlet should be bigger than the inlet because the departing air velocity is lower than the inlet air velocity.
I'll get measurements on those intake and outlets to compare the flow. I think the side outlets are too small as well. They are noticeably smaller than the chipmonk cheek cowls everyone else around here has. That was the reason for the AP recommending to cut the bottom cowl since my side exits are narrow with not much way to make them bigger without making a whole new cowl. He even suggested building something with a piano hinge so I could open and close it like cowl flaps based on outside temp. I'm waiting to do any major mods like this. The picture between my exhaust stacks was to show I could probably get 1/2-3/4" spacers in my bottom cowl to see if that increases the flow out the bottom and cools temps prior to doing any major modifications to the cowl.
SHIPCHIEF wrote:
Your lower baffles around the cylinders and heads look good right now, but the dynamic pressure could push them away...I don't see any springs/wire/all thread etc to hold them in place when the air flows thru-.
Ya, I thought about that as well. Since my #4 doesn't extend to the 6 oclock position on the cylinder like my #3 does I thought about taking thin sheet metal and sliding it down behind the cylinder and riveting it into place after I have it curved and all the way to the 6 oclock position. If I make that I can put a bend at the end which would allow me to use a spring to hold pressure against the cylinders. It never had the springs before and the baffle I have is made out of quite thick material and not easy to bend. I think they did this for that exact reason. Just by how hard it was to bend without putting a micrometer to it I would say easily 80 thou or 100 thou thick.
1albee: I don't plan on doing any major mods at this time since temps are getting better and weather is about to break from 90's down to 70's this weekend. I'm holding out on major mods until after I get my first oil change on this new top end. The oil consumption I think is really good for a break in compared to my piper. It was eating over a quart an hour when I replaced 2 cylinders last year.
Jeff J: can you get the dimensions of your side exits? Are you using a 320 or 290? My exits seem really narrow compared to the other type cowl I see commonly.
Cubes: I was only doing the touch and gos to get comfortable with the landings after 8 months of not flying tail wheel. I did 5 of them and it was on a 9000 foot runway so I was letting it get down to a crawl before taking off again. I will not be doing them any further. I will be spending long xc time in the plane to give it more break in time.
As for the probes. This is a used unit. I have not tested calibration on the sensors. I assume by the "distance from the heads" you are talking EGT probes which I have down to within 1/16th of an inch of each other as measured from the exhaust flange. The CHT probes are screwed into the bottom port on the cylinder heads. I did not cut any wires. The extra length I zip tied neatly away from everything since I might transfer this over to my piper. I didn't want to cut wires shorter. Some are different lengths from the previous owner but they were properly cut at the 25 pin side and had new pins put on. No splices anywhere in the system. When I get the cowl off wednesday I can see if I have enough length to swap my cht's from front to rear cylinders to check them.
Probes and unit were all purchased as a combo from JPI (I have a jpi 700). I am the second owner and have all the original things from the first owner. No new probes or replacement probes added.