Went to go fly the rent-a-wreck 172M this morning to do some approaches. Runup revealed a fouled plug that no amount of throttle and leaning could clear, so I put her back in the hangar.
I did about an hour of pattern work in this thing yesterday. I suspect the full rich mixture and significant time with carb heat on are what fouled the plugs. I should've done a shut down mag check last night but neglected to.
How prone to ice are the o-320 172's? All my hours are in Pipers, so carb ice is just not something I'm used to worrying about much. The poh for this plane of course says full heat prior to closing the throttle, and I was taught full heat any time you're out of the green arc. I'm wondering if partial heat might be more appropriate. I hate pulling that carb heat and hearing the engine bog down as it tries to digest the excessively rich mixture. Perhaps full heat and a bit of leaning? It was a cool, rainy day yesterday, so perfect conditions for carb ice. I understand Lycos are less prone to ice than the Continentals, but that the exhaust routing in the Cessna still makes it more of an issue than in Pipers?
I did about an hour of pattern work in this thing yesterday. I suspect the full rich mixture and significant time with carb heat on are what fouled the plugs. I should've done a shut down mag check last night but neglected to.
How prone to ice are the o-320 172's? All my hours are in Pipers, so carb ice is just not something I'm used to worrying about much. The poh for this plane of course says full heat prior to closing the throttle, and I was taught full heat any time you're out of the green arc. I'm wondering if partial heat might be more appropriate. I hate pulling that carb heat and hearing the engine bog down as it tries to digest the excessively rich mixture. Perhaps full heat and a bit of leaning? It was a cool, rainy day yesterday, so perfect conditions for carb ice. I understand Lycos are less prone to ice than the Continentals, but that the exhaust routing in the Cessna still makes it more of an issue than in Pipers?