I’m surprised at the ring damage.
Think the prop strike was handled incorrectly or they were installed wrong back then?
Was going to ask if you do oil samples regularly or have a baseline for them? I would think that much metal working it’s way loose would have shown up there, if not in the filter. I assume you cut open filters and look and use a magnet, etc.
Our news back from Annual this year is that we’re at 1269 SMOH Which was done in 1992.
Haven’t seen a compression below the low 70s ever, and log review shows the same.
We have the supposedly “undesirable” chrome cylinders popular in the late 80s/early 90s, but there seems to be one good use for those, and that’s airplanes that sometimes sit for a while and don’t fly enough.
Ours has had a few years like that obviously with only that many hours since ‘92. That’s only a 50 hour a year average and we fly it more than that. So it sat too much in the past.
(TTAF is only 2939 on a 1975. 69/yr average over 42 years.)
Chrome plus our incredibly dry climate may have actually helped this engine be happy for this long.
Plus we seem to be just before the rash of bad metallurgy in cylinders era started.
(I believe chrome is correct. Orange paint band, right? Doesn’t matter. Whatever they are they’re not going anywhere. Ha.)
So, we keep watching and waiting for any tell-tale signs of problems. Knock on aluminum and steel.