A new Lycoming cylinder was just bolted on last Friday in the number 3 (odd, like me) position. I have followed the Lyc break in procedures to the letter so far with 2 flights totaling 1.5 hours at full throttle as low as I can go. For those outside the know, the short version is...Lyc wants you to load the piston/cylinder in order to get the rings to seat properly and without glazing the cylinder walls. Home field elevation is 4600 with DAs of 5500-6500 this time of year during the day. Lyc wants their engines/cylinders broken in at 75% power thereabouts - at full throttle 1000 AGL with a DA of 6500 at the field elevation, I am barely pushing 75%, and Lyc wants you running at 100 ROP to keep it a little cool. The (majority of) articles I have read state that one should run the aircraft down low (5000 MSL) at 65% to 75% for anywhere from 10-50 or better hours to properly break in this cylinder.
So here is my dilemma - I'm high...
.....that too....ahem....I live at 5000 tootsies MSL and routinely fly at 8000-11000 MSL and will usually fly up at FL13 and change on the way to KVIS for 10 minutes this weekend over the Sierras.
Do you engine wiz bangs out there (strongly) recommend I stay low IFRoads long way around the Nevada mountains on my way to KVIS? (means a mean alt of around 7500 MSL at 1000-1500 AGL)...and all the while cranking out 65-75% power.
Or do you folks think it is OK to take it to the cool air and save a ton of gas?
All advice welcome, as there seems to be some conflicting stuff out there from minds far brighter than mine.