Yesterday I picked up the MU-2 from the hot section. Ultimately there was more wrong than expected, but thanks to Arkansas Turbine doing a great job of finding good used parts and sponsoring Cloud Nine, the bill was still quite reasonable for the work done.
In the end, all 3 stators and the stage 1 and 2 wheels had to get replaced, as well as the combustor, EGT harness, and a few other parts. The EGT harness on the plane was bad and was reading lower than actual. This probably explained part of the good performance that this had for an F model with -1s. He also found a couple of issues with the left side EGT harness, but not quite as bad.
I got to see and take home some of the old parts. The stators especially were very noticeably bad, with a lot of obvious erosion just from the heat blast. The turbine wheels themselves didn't look as bad, but there are some holes that developed cracks beyond the serviceable limit, plus a cracked blade or two (which is not allowable). The leading edges of the blades also had erosion that may or may not have been serviceable. Ultimately once one item gets beyond limits, the part is scrapped.
There is a noticeable improvement in the right engine performance. More torque at less fuel flow. I only did the test flight home, so I haven't been able to evaluate total performance, but it definitely seems to be more efficient than previously. I did a few points to try to determine optimal efficiency (this was at FL200, so not very high), and doing 241 KTAS @ 56 GPH seemed to be the most efficient at that altitude, at 4.3 NMPG. The efficiency should actually get better as I go up to higher altitudes, and we also departed with full fuel because it was going to be cheaper than back home and thus there was more weight.
Tomorrow I'm going down to Florida for the MU-2 convention and will get to play with it some more. I imagine I'll file for FL230 or 250 and see how it does up there.
Part of the return to service for any TPE-331 aircraft that has had an engine removal is an "NTS test flight" to make sure the NTS system is working correctly. So you have to do an in-flight shutdown and restart. I posted a video if that that my friend and co-pilot took. You can see the video on the Cloud Nine Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/cloudninerescueflights/
I'm very, very happy with the end result and can't wait to get back to saving pups with it!