SHIPCHIEF wrote:
We all want the 2000 TBO, plus as many more as we can get. That means cylinder temps under 400, preferably under 385.
My T-18 ran at or below 320F (O-290, chipmunk cheek cowl) running at or near full power (because I CAN!) until I added a Pmag, then it increased to 330F.
I simply can't imagine a T-18 running that hot. Something isn't right.
You mentioned the cylinder baffles are 1" away at the bottom. These must touch the cylinder fins all the way to the bottom, and are held tight with springs or safety wire, The air must flow through those fins, not past the tips.
If you open the baffle at the back of cylinders #3 & #4 without tightening the inter-cylinder baffles at the bottom, you temps will increase. RTV seal the back baffle as before. ANY air path that IS NOT THRU the cylinders is a loss of cooling. Especially the heads.
I reduced the quote but will respond to each questions. Your response and questions are helpful!
So after the initial 1.5 hours I did some work to the baffles.
Removed and replaced the side asbestos seals with silicone seals like my rear baffle seal.
Increased the distance to roughly 1/4" behind the rear cylinders.
Checked inter cylinder baffles: correctly installed and up against the cylinder fins.
Adjusted rear baffles so they curve up against the rear cylinders to the bottom (almost touching) (as pictured)
Sealed off any spots in the baffling that would allow air to seep out of the upper plenum
Created 2 angled air deflectors to push air above the front cylinders
Oil cooler is mounted up front with a scoop on it. I blew through it with air compressor to make sure no debris. I can see through it without any blockages. There is no thermostat on the oil cooler.
Gravity fed without fuel pump
Oil temp sensor is in the oil screen housing so I'm not sure if that is before or after the cooler. It appears my cooler return line goes straight back into the rear of the engine in a different area than my oil screen.
Running 100LL in the plane so mogas issue shouldn't be an issue. Still doesn't stop it from having vapor lock although no hard starting when it's hot which is the most common time for vapor lock to be evident from what I know.
I have 2 exhaust stacks with no cross over pipe. There is only 1 carb heat muff on it which was not removed or messed with. It is intact without any issues upon inspection.
Fuel line is centerline 6" away from each exhaust stack as is my gascolator.
Carb seal was new last winter and carb wasn't removed for top engine work. All bolts and safety wire were checked. A leak around the carb seal I think would most likely cause leak condition on all 4 cylinders.
Checked all intake gasket bolts and hose clamps on intake tubes were all tight. Intake gaskets/exhaust gaskets were all replaced. No evidence of leaking by tracts of fuel around intake or carbon on exhausts.
I'm not sure what this "propeller seal" is everyone talks about. Is it the baffle seal around the front of the engine behind the starter gear? If so the baffling is all silicone seal and in good condition. I always check it's properly positioned before flight.
Engine was done by a shop, not myself. All measurements were as needed per the engine manual stated by the AP. My #3 is a steel bore and #4 is a chrome bore so they have different rings. Fronts are both steel bore. I'll have to take his word they were properly installed.
Oil consumption was minimal on first 1.5 and today after .8. Used less than 1qt on initial flight. it was set to 6 and I was a little under 6 after the flight but not halfway between 4 and 6 markings which means it was over 5 qts left.
Only a tiny spot on the concrete under the breather after the flights. About the size of a dime. Way less than what drips out of my piper's breather.
Plugs were all cleaned and checked prior to assembly. I was the one that checked them and I replaced a single plug that was at 6k ohms with all the rest under 3k ohms resistance. I'm pulling the plugs tomorrow to check color and re-check resistors just in case. I think it would be rare for 2 plugs on opposite cylinders die immediately after inspection but I'm checking anyways. Mag drops when checking are equal and not quite 100 rpm drop when checked.
So, after today's flight. I went up earlier so temps were better but still upper 70's when I took off and mid 80's when returning with high humidity (real feel was in the 90's). The "bog" was better today and I didn't have much issue with touch and goes. After 6 touch and goes in a tight pattern I finally saw the rear cylinder temps rising above 450. I hit 460 on #4 which reduced after lowering the nose. I was running around 420-430 on the rear cylinders again today in cruise at 2500 between 2 airports. Fronts are low 300's. Oil temps were under 200* for the most part with 210* when those rear cylinders heated up after the last touch and go with a little too steep of a climb.
In straight and level cruise at 2500 if I push full throttle when the engine temps are cooled down they start to raise but I don't get the stumble I had before. So this could be vaporization of the fuel or just running rich due to hot engine bay temps when my cylinders are heated up. EGTS and chts do rise up together when pushing full throttle. Fronts come up more slowly. Cylinders 3&4 are within 1 bar of each other on my JPI in both egt and cht. When I cycle through them to see the actual temp they appear about 10-15* max difference between 3&4 and 1&2. Rear cylinders seem about 75-100* hotter compared to front cylinders.
I'm going to pull the plugs and see if they are dark or light to see if it's a lean condition or a rich condition with the stumble. Vaporzation (vapor lock) would have my plugs bone white and heat making it rich would make them dark or loaded.
I was hoping better temps after all my changes to the cowl but no luck. They are better but not a huge improvement like I wanted. One of the things the AP and I thought could be an issue is scaveging of air out of the lower cowl to allow higher flow of air through the cylinders. It appears my seal on the top plenum is good. I think the air is backing up at the rear cylinders and not moving down and out the back as much as it needs to get more change over of air. With my tight bottom cowl around the exhaust stacks and the slit type openings on the sides he thinks the air is getting trapped and not venting fast enough. He suggested a vent hole in the bottom by the exhaust similar to the piper or cessna engine vent to allow the air to flow through the engine more. This makes sense with the back of up air over the rear cylinders but I don't want to just start hacking on my lower cowl.
I honestly think cooling was an issue before even though I never saw it because I didn't have a JPI and I don't think the old single probe cht gauge was accurate. The AP that tore my engine down told me (before we even replaced stuff) that it "looked like a hot running engine". I told him otherwise since the gauge told me it was normal. Now that I'm getting high temps on the rear cylinders I'm thinking he was right about the hot running and I was just in the dark from it previously. I also operated this only october-february in Indiana weather so I've never flown it in hot and humid temps. The return flight in late sept was the hottest and it was low 80's on an old engine.
The engine also seems to produce a noticeable difference in power now. My take off rolls are a lot shorter at my home base and it wants to climb like crazy. If I picked up power from the top overhaul (all cylinders barely in the 60psi range and 1 mid 50's before overhaul) then that would also increase my engine temps as well.
Anyways, I'm beside myself and racking my brain on this so any help is welcomed. The engine is smooth and powerful so I like to think that there isn't anything serious wrong with the engine causing the temps but I don't know what to think anymore. I really don't want to cut up my cowl to increase airflow and then after I get a number of hours the temps come down anyways due to break in. I'm thinking about getting it up in cool air next weekend and just doing straight and level cruise for a number of hours and see if the temps stabilize after I get 10 hours of easy flying on it.
Are there any issues with valve adjustment that could cause cylinders to run hot? AP said after 5 hours he will check the tappet clearance again. I can't think of a scenario in my engine building experience that improper valve adjustment would cause egt and cht to both be high together. And to both be within 10* of each other means that is a pretty accurate mistake on 2 cylinders.