Lou wrote:
Hey John, why are there braided lines plumbed into the front of the lifter oil galleys on both sides?
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Hi Lou,
The pictures didn't come through for me, but I assume you're talking about the line at the top front of the engine... it's a single line, connecting the 2 threaded ports on both sides together. It's a little bit of a long story that I believe I've related on this forum in the past, but I'll try to give you a shortened answer. Years ago in the 90's a friend, Ray (now deceased), who raced his Pitts at Reno, had such a line on his engine. He said that he used to have a problem with a very oily spark plug on the #4 cylinder of his engine every time he checked. Someone told him to install the line, he did, and the oily plug went away. My #4 bottom plug was also oily whenever I checked it, although it didn't seem to be a problem. I called and talked to one of the engineers at Lycoming about it. He said that adding that line wouldn't hurt anything, but it wouldn't have any effect other than adding a couple more places for leaks to develop. OK, so I tried it anyway, and sure enough my plug wasn't oily anymore. Supposedly the theory is that since oil enters that galley from the back of the engine then goes forward and crosses over to the right side galley through an internal port and back down that side, that the internal port is possibly a little undersized, and the oil pressure is greater right where the oil enters above that #4 cylinder. I guess that depending on valve guide condition, etc., that perhaps excessive oil builds up under the rocker box cover and seeps down into that cylinder when the engine is shut down. The line is supposed to help even the pressure between the 2 galleys. I know that theory sounds a little dubious, but I've got nothin' else. Some people who've tried it say it worked like it did for me & Ray. For others it supposedly didn't have any effect. I used a -3 Teflon lined SS braided line with steel fittings.