Not too common in my book.
“Ring Chatter” is what the cylinder shop called it.
The particular aircraft was a Lycoming 172 used for Fish Spotting.
Hours and hours of LOW power and low airspeed were routine.
I may have had to adjust Oil Pressure because it was was below Green Arc
at Low RPMs.
This is a sky diving airplane, run hard, going up and go down quick.
Idle descends, but why only one cylinder getting this?Well, if you were going to experience ring chatter in a flat engine, that would be the one
Always idle power descents?
There's your problem.This is a sky diving airplane...
I was wondering ?Nothing to add except that has to be the cleanest cylinder I’ve ever seen.
O470R
Cyl, piston , rings 50 hrs since new
Strange pattern in cylinder and high oil burn, 1 quart per 2 hrs of flight.
Any ideas?
I was going to say the same thing.Nothing to add except that has to be the cleanest cylinder I’ve ever seen.
∆∆∆Simple, the engine wasn't broke in correctly.
or
the rings are upside down.
ORAt 50 hours some would argue it wasn't broken in yet, so I'll go with the "not broken in properly" answer.
All that would create is low manifold pressure. That occurs every time the throttle is closed. not likely cause any damage.I have read that ring chatter may have as one cause; prop driving the engine (flat prop, idle power, high airspeed)
I know it's a Continental in question here, but they use cylinders and pistons and rings just Lycoming does, and Lyc has this to say in their break-in Service Instruction:I have read that ring chatter may have as one cause; prop driving the engine (flat prop, idle power, high airspeed)
No, that was taken with the cylinder open.Just curious-- how was that picture taken? Can a boroscope take one from that angle?
Are you certain the picture/cylinder we are looking at is ring "Flutter" I'm not.I know it's a Continental in question here, but they use cylinders and pistons and rings just Lycoming does, and Lyc has this to say in their break-in Service Instruction:
DO NOT DO CLOSED THROTTLE DESCENTS. CLOSED THROTTLE OPERATION DURING DESCENTS WILL CAUSE RING FLUTTER WHICH CAN CAUSE DAMAGE TO THE CYLINDERS AND RINGS.
From https://www.lycoming.com/sites/default/files/Lycoming Reciprocating engine Break-In and Oil Consumption.pdf
I'm not sure what we are looking at, but this pattern is more like a poor bore job.O470R
Cyl, piston , rings 50 hrs since new
Strange pattern in cylinder and high oil burn, 1 quart per 2 hrs of flight.
Any ideas?
I spent 12 years in a machine shop and did a lot of cylinder honing. Thousands of hours of it. Never saw any pattern like that. Ever. And I've never seen the the automotive-style boring machines used on aircraft cylinders. The small amount of metal removal doesn't justify it.I'm not sure what we are looking at, but this pattern is more like a poor bore job.
typically cylinders are honed with a stone, but automotive bores use tool bits that leave tool marks very much this.
True.. It just looks likes the pattern left after a bore bar.I spent 12 years in a machine shop and did a lot of cylinder honing. Thousands of hours of it. Never saw any pattern like that. Ever. And I've never seen the the automotive-style boring machines used on aircraft cylinders. The small amount of metal removal doesn't justify it.