Picking up a plane with 2 new cylinders, asked the mechanic about break-in and he mentioned it has mineral oil but didn’t say much about how to run it. Any thoughts on how to run the engine on the journey back and for how many hours this process would take to ensure the new cylinders are good to go. Have read a couple articles online that say to shorten the taxi and run-up (only cycle prop once), kind of feeling a bit weirded out skipping steps with a plane new
Rather than trusting a bunch of random commenters on the internet who may or may not know anything about engines, I'd suggest finding out what the OEM recommends for a break in procedure. I'd also confer with the shop that performed the work and follow their suggestions. I would not want to be in a debate over whether the break in was performed properly or not, if a problem should arise.
I agree with this^^^^^
I didn't ask on the internet when it came time to start my new engine. I followed lycomings instructions exactly. I will post them next time I get into my logs.
I realize the OP only had a couple cyls replaced, so I would follow the instructions his mechanic suggests.
The longer lycoming version was, 5-10 minutes with the cowl off to check for leaks and to warm up the engine.
Then put the cowl on, face the plane into the wind and run it at 1500 rpms for 20 minutes.
Then let it cool.
Then without delay go fly the 2-2.5 hour flights. Once the oil consumption stabilizes they consider it "broke in"
Like said after the second flight my motor pretty much stopped using oil. It uses a qt every 12 hours now.
I have a interesting story about ring spacing and oil consumption, but I will save that for another day.