flycapt2310
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2012
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flycapt2310
Hi all…
I have an issue in a new engine. The aircraft is a Diamond Da40 FP with a Lycoming o-360. The flight school purchased an overhauled engine from a local shop. Since day one we have had a power issue…
When applying power the engine RPM will come up normal to about 2200 RPM as you continue to advance the throttle the engine will start to stumble back and loose RPM. With full throttle the engine RPM is low 1900’s. With full throttle we should be at about 2300 RPM (static – on the ground no forward motion). If we pull the mixture back we can get more power out of the engine but never what the old engine did.
This has been going on for a month and half our mechanic and engine builder has been trying to resolve the issue. Diamond and Lycoming have 2 different carburetors that they say can be used on the engine. The diamond carb has more fuel going into the engine. This is what was on the previous engine and it ran great. Lycoming said to use a carb with a little less fuel. So we changed over to the smaller carb. We got a 50 to 80 percent increase in engine RPM. So now with full throttle we are at high 1900’s. If we pull the mixture back a little we can get up to mid 2100 RPM.
We then started isolating extra systems…
Carburetor heat was disengaged to make sure it wasn’t leaking hot air at high power settings, no fix.
Engine driven fuel pump was inspected – we hooked up a fuel pressure gauge to it to make sure it was the correct pressure it was 5 psi (which is the correct psi). No fix
Magnetos were changed, and engine timing was confirmed correct. No fix
We changed the wire harness to make sure it wasn’t a bad wire. No fix
We disengaged the fuel primer. No fix. I also ran the engine and then turned the fuel primer on (its electric solenoid) it flooded the engine as it should.
Mixture cable throw is set full rich to full idle.
Throttle cable throw is set full open to idle stop.
Changes spark plugs. No fix.
Check valve springs – nothing broken
When we changes spark plugs we noticed that the number 2 cylinder bottom plug was excessively rich. So pulled the rocker cover and looked at the springs no issue. We pulled the springs off and found the intake valve to stick a little so we changed the number 2 cylinder.
When we ran it up next we gained 100 RPM, BUT still at full power we are seeing a drop in RPM. So were now at high 2100 RPM at full throttle. If we pull the mixture back we can get up to 2200 RPM.
We then thought that maybe we had a stuck lifter. We changed all the lifters in the other cylinders and confirmed that the push-rod tubes were all the correct length. NO FIX
We then pulled the engine back off the plane and send it back to the shop. He opened it up inspected his internal timing which was correct but checked it again. Changed the cam-shaft, inspected all the cylinders, valves, valve guides, cylinder size, and anything else he could measure.
We just reinstalled the engine and same problem…. What now???
We are at full power with 2100-2150 RPM. In-between all the test we have test flown the aircraft. It stays at that lower power the entire time during climb and will produce more power once level. If we keep the mixture back we can get mid 2200 RPM out of it. It should right after takeoff produce 2400 + RPM as soon as we break ground.
I have an issue in a new engine. The aircraft is a Diamond Da40 FP with a Lycoming o-360. The flight school purchased an overhauled engine from a local shop. Since day one we have had a power issue…
When applying power the engine RPM will come up normal to about 2200 RPM as you continue to advance the throttle the engine will start to stumble back and loose RPM. With full throttle the engine RPM is low 1900’s. With full throttle we should be at about 2300 RPM (static – on the ground no forward motion). If we pull the mixture back we can get more power out of the engine but never what the old engine did.
This has been going on for a month and half our mechanic and engine builder has been trying to resolve the issue. Diamond and Lycoming have 2 different carburetors that they say can be used on the engine. The diamond carb has more fuel going into the engine. This is what was on the previous engine and it ran great. Lycoming said to use a carb with a little less fuel. So we changed over to the smaller carb. We got a 50 to 80 percent increase in engine RPM. So now with full throttle we are at high 1900’s. If we pull the mixture back a little we can get up to mid 2100 RPM.
We then started isolating extra systems…
Carburetor heat was disengaged to make sure it wasn’t leaking hot air at high power settings, no fix.
Engine driven fuel pump was inspected – we hooked up a fuel pressure gauge to it to make sure it was the correct pressure it was 5 psi (which is the correct psi). No fix
Magnetos were changed, and engine timing was confirmed correct. No fix
We changed the wire harness to make sure it wasn’t a bad wire. No fix
We disengaged the fuel primer. No fix. I also ran the engine and then turned the fuel primer on (its electric solenoid) it flooded the engine as it should.
Mixture cable throw is set full rich to full idle.
Throttle cable throw is set full open to idle stop.
Changes spark plugs. No fix.
Check valve springs – nothing broken
When we changes spark plugs we noticed that the number 2 cylinder bottom plug was excessively rich. So pulled the rocker cover and looked at the springs no issue. We pulled the springs off and found the intake valve to stick a little so we changed the number 2 cylinder.
When we ran it up next we gained 100 RPM, BUT still at full power we are seeing a drop in RPM. So were now at high 2100 RPM at full throttle. If we pull the mixture back we can get up to 2200 RPM.
We then thought that maybe we had a stuck lifter. We changed all the lifters in the other cylinders and confirmed that the push-rod tubes were all the correct length. NO FIX
We then pulled the engine back off the plane and send it back to the shop. He opened it up inspected his internal timing which was correct but checked it again. Changed the cam-shaft, inspected all the cylinders, valves, valve guides, cylinder size, and anything else he could measure.
We just reinstalled the engine and same problem…. What now???
We are at full power with 2100-2150 RPM. In-between all the test we have test flown the aircraft. It stays at that lower power the entire time during climb and will produce more power once level. If we keep the mixture back we can get mid 2200 RPM out of it. It should right after takeoff produce 2400 + RPM as soon as we break ground.