I’ll do my best to sum up the things I’ve noticed and actions taken. Grumman AA-1, the engine is a Lycoming O-235, and since purchase we’ve noticed the tach waver slightly when performing a mag check. Drop and differential is within limits, and with the age of the plane and gauges, we had chalked it up to being a minor gauge issue. I recently had the prop balanced, and the following analysis pointed in the direction of a “cylinder misfire” causing some extra vibration. I tested it myself after and ran it on the ground lean to clean off the plugs. After the first plug cleaning run up, I was looking for any EGT abnormalities, and after switching to left mag it stayed for about 5 seconds, then suffered a large RPM drop/choke. I tested it with both full rich and leaned mixtures, both of which caused a large drop on the left mag. The following week I called my mechanic out to look at it, and after a visual inspection of the spark plugs/cleaning, we ran it up to test. Once again no large drop or choke upon initial run up, but it seems after the first run up or after the engine heats up is when it creates the choke about 5 seconds after switching to left. my mechanic could hear the slight surge as well as seeing the tach waver around 25-50 rpm on L+R mags. Running on both creates a stable indication. They now plan on further exploring issues on the spark side of things, any ideas?