I tried LOP on my 5 hour flight today, from the first cylinder to peak (now I know its the last, EI wont do last cylinder to peak).
With GAMIs, isn't the EGTs supposed to be close together? Could someone tell me if these numbers look okay? 7,000 ft 8.1gph OAT 19C WOT/2400RPM
EGT / CHT
1 - 1248/279
2- 1290/279
3- 1313/303
4- 1236/280
The first cylinder to peak was number 2 and it was 1320 degrees. I leaned until Cylinder #2 was 30 degrees less and it ran really rough.. If I had the JPI and did 30 degrees from the last cylinder to peak, would it run rougher?
Disclaimer: I'm not an engine expert or even a mechanic, but I have GAMIs and have been trying to fly LOP for several years.
If you're adjusting the mixture from the rich side, then you set it based on the last cylinder to peak - i.e., the richest cylinder. In your case, something doesn't sound right assuming you have correctly installed GAMIs, unless all the other cylinders peaked while #2 was going from peak to 30 LOP, which doesn't seem likely.
The absolute EGT that each cylinder reads is considered to be less important than the difference in the fuel flow at which the richest and leanest cylinders peak, which should be 0.5 gph or less with GAMIs.
Are you sure your mechanic installed the nozzles correctly? They are custom made for each cylinder based on the results of a GAMI lean test similar to the one someone else posted, done with your original cylinders. Then the test is repeated with the new cylinders and GAMI will tweak the nozzles, ideally until all cylinders peak within 0.5 gph of each other. If the nozzles are interchanged and installed on the wrong cylinders, the results will be poor.
It's not always possible to get all cylinders to peak that close together. My engine, also an IO-360, is unfortunately like that, my #3 and #4 peak first, then #2, then #1 about 0.6 gph leaner than #4. This is after 3 iterations of new nozzles, all aimed at making #3 and #4 richer. I can get #2 and #1 about 20 dF into LOP territory before the engine starts running rough, which is not out of the red box for high power ops. I lose too much speed at lower altitudes by throttling back to less than 65% power, so I only run LOP at altitudes above 6000 MSL, and in fact, at 8000 or above, I run WOT and just lean for peak EGT on #2, and sometimes leave #2 and #1 slightly ROP since no red box exists at the power output levels possible at that altitude.
Three mechanics have tried to determine the reason and none has been able to come up with a clue. One very experienced guy ruled out all pathological reasons for the problem and basically gave up.
One engine expert who sometimes posts on PoA suggested to me that I might be being too conservative in my ops because it's hard to make an IO-360 detonate, and that I can still run WOTLOP at altitudes below 8000. I'm chicken.
I hope you can figure out what is going on with your engine. Good luck!