L
LotsO’lead
Guest
Hi, as a renter pilot, I try to use many of the tactics necessary for proper operation to help keep costs low. I don’t believe in this “FULL RENTAL POWER” stuff, that’s horrible, horrible advice.
Anyway, I Cherokee Archer with the 180bhp Lycoming at the club. Our house instructor hounds us about leaning it to the hilt on the ground and leaning til the tachometer peaks while in cruise flight. My protocol general is, START (full rich) and right after start-up, I run it to 1000RPM and then pull the mixture back as far as I can possibly go without the engine quitting. Obviously full rich for climb and once I get in cruise flight, I do the lean til peak RPM method taught by our house CFI. Basically once the engine sounds like it’s losing power and the tachometer indicates such, I bring the mixture control forward just enough to smooth it back out and then leave it! Some may call this lean until it stumbles and richen up until it smooths out. Anyway, I put it away, the next guy goes to fly it and it has a bad magneto check. They come back on me and blame me for running it too rich to the point of fouling a plug. I hop in my sedan and dash back over to the flying club to assist in troubleshooting. Pull the top cowl, remove the spark plugs and sure enough, there’s a plug full of lead. Now I’m on the hook to replace it because they claim I don’t lean enough. Question is, does this method that I’m describing not prevent plug fouling? If so, how may I educate our CFI that his teachings are incorrect?
Anyway, I Cherokee Archer with the 180bhp Lycoming at the club. Our house instructor hounds us about leaning it to the hilt on the ground and leaning til the tachometer peaks while in cruise flight. My protocol general is, START (full rich) and right after start-up, I run it to 1000RPM and then pull the mixture back as far as I can possibly go without the engine quitting. Obviously full rich for climb and once I get in cruise flight, I do the lean til peak RPM method taught by our house CFI. Basically once the engine sounds like it’s losing power and the tachometer indicates such, I bring the mixture control forward just enough to smooth it back out and then leave it! Some may call this lean until it stumbles and richen up until it smooths out. Anyway, I put it away, the next guy goes to fly it and it has a bad magneto check. They come back on me and blame me for running it too rich to the point of fouling a plug. I hop in my sedan and dash back over to the flying club to assist in troubleshooting. Pull the top cowl, remove the spark plugs and sure enough, there’s a plug full of lead. Now I’m on the hook to replace it because they claim I don’t lean enough. Question is, does this method that I’m describing not prevent plug fouling? If so, how may I educate our CFI that his teachings are incorrect?