Dan Thomas
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Dan Thomas
There is no shock cooling on shutdown, because there is no high-velocity blast of cold air going through the cooling fins. So starting a hot engine is no big deal.I've seen pictures similar to the one you shared about the dangers of cold starts (<-5°c) without preheating, where the clearances between the piston and cylinder wall are inadequate to allow lubrication.
I don't have the personal expertise to argue this, but I will cite someone who does, https://www.avweb.com/ownership/shock-cooling-time-to-kill-the-myth/
Note that he does talk about CHT rather than the actual cylinder temperature (as does Lycoming, for that matter, with the 50°F/minute restriction). Presumably, since we can't measure the cylinder directly, the CHT is the closest proxy we can use, so Lycoming chose the 50°F/minute CHT number because of whatever actual temperatures the cylinder and piston would experience. Also acknowledging that the "shock cooling" Durden mentions after shutdown — where the engine cools at 100°F/minute — wouldn't result in the scuffing you mention, because the engine isn't running, and that "shock heating" when advancing the throttle would cause the cylinder to expand faster than the piston, so again, no scuffing. What about shutting down and restarting when the engine is still hot, though?
And finally, this subthread started by talking about how flight-school planes often go past TBO (and don't go through cylinders at an accelerated pace). What is your theory on why "shock cooling" doesn't damage them?
No preheating means that the entire engine is cold, cylinders and all. Since that aluminum piston shrinks much more than the steel cylinder, there is more clearance, not less. Scuffing when cold is more a result of that thick oil not being pumped to critical areas soon enough.
Shock heating? I've read that leaning the mixture too fast can cause that. The ultralight guys with their two-strokes know they have to warm their engines properly before takeoff, or they can seize suddenly shortly after takeoff.
We ran our flight school airplanes down to -25°C (-13°F). I forbade any spin practice at those temperatures, since that always results in a power-off dive in the recovery. Touch-and-goes don't cause shock-cooling, either, since we're not at idle at high airspeed for any extended periods. Glider tugs and jump planes don't fly in the cold winter air either, so shock-cooling is far less likely. When I flew glider tug the ambient temperatures were 70-100°F. Even then we sometimes read of jump planes needing cylinder work more often than the typical cross-country flyer. They climb to much higher altitudes where the air is a lot colder.
You can find any number of articles to support your opinions one way or another. I speak from my experience as a machinist and aircraft mechanic and pilot. A lot of articles are written by pilots who have read opinions by other people, just like today's media which is full of journalists who are suddenly virologists or economists or scientists or politicians depending on the topic at hand. They have absolutely no education or experience in the field they're writing about, and it often shows. They're just parroting someone else, or are drawing inaccurate conclusions because they don't understand the terminology, technology and history.
Here's another opinion:
https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/1996/november/pilot/shock-therapy
Bottom line:
1. An aircraft engine costs a lot of money.
2. If an aircraft engine quits, things can get mighty unpleasant.
3. Engines that are handled roughly, aggressively, outside POH limitations, receive inadequate inspections and maintenance, are flown too infrequently or just run on the ground, are more likely to quit or suffer significant power loss or shortened life long before TBO.
4. If Lycoming and Continental are concerned about shock cooling, who is qualified to dispute that other than another engine designer and manufacturer?
5. So why wouldn't we just try to treat that engine with respect?