Thank youI’ll check mine in a day or two.
What difference does make where the rotation group is ? wouldn't it be same no matter where it is?Like the man says, free play is highest at TDC/BDC. In a four cylinder when two cylinders are at TDC the other two will be at BDC. One of the TDCs will be at the end of the compression stroke. Is this where you are seeing the 1" free play? If so, suggest you rotate the prop 90 degrees so the cylinders are at mid stroke. The free play can then be approximated as (big end clearance) X (ratio of propeller diameter : piston stroke). For example .006" X (70"/4") = 0.105". I'm not smart enough to estimate free play at TDC/BDC. Never noticed any free play on my plane but then it is a six so only two cylinders will be at TDC/BDC at any time.
Is this on an engine that is operational?
YES
This could be one of those items that you can be around forever but not”see”.
Does it matter how many cylinders the engine has? wouldn't this check measure the cylinder that has the least ring to piston side clearance?Like the man says, free play is highest at TDC/BDC. In a four cylinder when two cylinders are at TDC the other two will be at BDC. One of the TDCs will be at the end of the compression stroke. Is this where you are seeing the 1" free play? If so, suggest you rotate the prop 90 degrees so the cylinders are at mid stroke. The free play can then be approximated as (big end clearance) X (ratio of propeller diameter : piston stroke). For example .006" X (70"/4") = 0.105". I'm not smart enough to estimate free play at TDC/BDC. Never noticed any free play on my plane but then it is a six so only two cylinders will be at TDC/BDC at any time.
It doesn't change at any position.
this was during a pre-buy.
An inspector at the club, says it is too much.
That would be scaryLOTS of clearance at big end of Conn Rod might do that.
That is what we are trying to determine, the general condition of the engine is a considerationFind a limit in writing and we have a fault. Until then we do not have a fault.
Well, the spec for the GO-300 would be due to backlash in the gears.I have checked the G0-300, because of the reduction gears that have a set limit.
but the 0-200 ?
we don't know, that is the scary part.Well, the spec for the GO-300 would be due to backlash in the gears.
But an O-200 is direct drive. So, where would "free play" come from? Between the prop and the crank? Any would be too much. Bearings? You have a few thousandths of clearance which should translate to hundredths of an inch at the prop - if there was enough to move the prop 1", you have a problem that should be obvious as soon as you start the engine. Flange is integral to the crank on an O-200 - correct?
Thanks for the info, That is what we thought too.Theoretically 1 inch of double amplitude free play at the prop tip (assuming a 76 inch prop diameter) with all 4 cylinders of a direct drive engine approximately at mid stroke would suggest a total clearance of the rod big end plus little end plus ring gap of .012 inch.
This ignores main bearing clearance, there is no ring motion in the cylinder, and the piston isn't rattling in the bore. All of these will add to the apparent backlash at the prop tip.
Still seems way more than should be. Are you sure it is a full 1 inch D.A.?
At TDC/BDC the crank pin is moving perpendicular (sideways) to the piston/rod so the crank will move a relatively large distance before the piston moves noticeably. This is why you find TDC by stopping the piston short of TDC, measuring the angles in both directions, and splitting the difference. You know this procedure quite well as you have described it in this forum.What difference does make where the rotation group is ? wouldn't it be same no matter where it is?
As a crank pin moves off the 90 degree mark, another moves to take its place the amount that measurement changes will decrease as the number of crank pins increasesAt TDC/BDC the crank pin is moving perpendicular (sideways) to the piston/rod so the crank will move a relatively large distance before the piston moves noticeably. This is why you find TDC by stopping the piston short of TDC, measuring the angles in both directions, and splitting the difference. You know this procedure quite well as you have described it in this forum.
In the real world my calculated free play may not be noticeable due to the oil film in the big end and oil/carbon on the piston rings. AFAIK it is not a standard test for direct drive propellers.
However 1" does sound alarming. Have you removed the spinner and checked the integrity of the prop mounting bolts?
Hmmm...your calculations show much more free play than mine. Care to show your math (I'm sounding like my 8th grade science teacher!) or indicate where mine is wrong?Theoretically 1 inch of double amplitude free play at the prop tip (assuming a 76 inch prop diameter) with all 4 cylinders of a direct drive engine approximately at mid stroke would suggest a total clearance of the rod big end plus little end plus ring gap of .012 inch.
In any reasoning, It is my opinion this aircraft is not be flown..the A&Ps agree.The assumed prop diameter should have been 70 inches, the stroke is 3.625 inches. Assuming no clearance elsewhere (such as main bearings etc), 1 inch at the prop tip equals (3.625/70) X (clearance). Therefore clearance = .051 double amplitude, which is a correction to my original calculations. On reflection I don't think there is a double vs single amplitude correction that needs to be applied. Originally I thought so.
That much clearance seems impossible unless a bearing shell has been left out (whee!). That's why I questioned the original 1" D.A. observation. Tom clearly says the backlash is present even at mid stroke. Otherwise it would be a (1-Cos) function which would be much more reasonable.
How do you get less free play when all cylinders are at mid-stroke? or are you looking at stroke end?
I'm no longer in the engine rebuild business, I will probably never see the 150-/0-200 again.I suppose it could happen that all four big end rod cap bearings could have been left out! It would probably run but no oil pressure & would make a helluva noise!
Tom - If you get to see the insides of this engine you have to tell us what happened!
In a four-cylinder opposed engine all the crankpins are at 90 degrees at the same time.As a crank pin moves off the 90 degree mark, another moves to take its place the amount that measurement changes will decrease as the number of crank pins increases
this 1 inch measurement never changes.
and yes it is tight.
Good call.AD 93-11-03 pertains to similar.