Any way to squeeze this for more juice? O360 A4M is what I have. Power Flow doesn't make anything for it. I have all of Knots2u speed mods. Any way to squeeze this berry for more go?
What sort of speed increase are you looking for? You're going to get a few more knots if you're lucky and potentially spend a fair amount of money doing it. I don't see how getting 131 knots instead of 129 knots is worth much of any time or effort personally.I have been researching the idea of stepping up to a Saratoga or A36, but I just don't want to get rid of this Archer. It will fly 129kts all day and if I could squeeze a few more out, I'd probably be convinced to do the interior, paint it and drop in a 540 and gpss roll stering.
I really only need 5 seats 2 times a year, so I'm thinking keeping it and getting the speed up would seal the deal. For the times I do need the seating, flying commercial would probably cost OA less than owning a PA32 or A36 over the course of the year.
What is this ignition you speak of? And to have the prop repitched, what are the costs and what kind of speed increases? Right now I can climb full fuel and two passengers at 400lbs just under 1k FPS. With just me, it climbs pegged at 1k best rate.
There's not much more you can do with that engine. You could get the cylinders ported and flowmatched the next time they're worked on. You could get a Powerflow exhaust system. You could replace your air filter with a K&N Challenger air filter. Doing all that might add 10-15 HP to your power output. But even an extra 15 HP is unlikely to improve your speed by more than about 3 knots.I have been researching the idea of stepping up to a Saratoga or A36, but I just don't want to get rid of this Archer. It will fly 129kts all day and if I could squeeze a few more out, I'd probably be convinced to do the interior, paint it and drop in a 540 and gpss roll stering.
Repitching the prop with greater pitch will not give you any speed increases unless you are currently hitting redline RPM before reaching desired cruise power. However, it will reduce your takeoff/climb performance. The only way to get more speed by repitching the prop is to reduce pitch so the engine can spin faster and develop more power -- and that works only if you're reaching full throttle before reaching desired cruise power (highly unlikely) or you don't mind going well beyond the RPM redline (not a real good idea).And to have the prop repitched, what are the costs and what kind of speed increases?
Repitching the prop with greater pitch will not give you any speed increases unless you are currently hitting redline RPM before reaching desired cruise power. However, it will reduce your takeoff/climb performance. The only way to get more speed by repitching the prop is to reduce pitch so the engine can spin faster and develop more power -- and that works only if you're reaching full throttle before reaching desired cruise power (highly unlikely) or you don't mind going well beyond the RPM redline (not a real good idea).
That's apparently an airframe issue more than an engine issue. I have an O-360-A4M with long-stack PowerFlow in a C-172. The only PA-28-180s that qualify are the old blunt-cowl models with aft-mounted mufflers. Muffler geometry must be the issue.Any way to squeeze this for more juice? O360 A4M is what I have. Power Flow doesn't make anything for it.
Diluted fuel.You can also try a little MMO in the fuel and see what you get.
Diluted fuel.
But the K&N Challenger filter did give me another half inch or so MP at full throttle on my O-360-A4K (close relative to the OP's -A4M).
I have to ask, how much gas could you have purchased with the same amount that you spent on upgrades? I don't see the worth in aviation.Assuming you're talking about your PA28, and your real goal here I'm guessing is more speed more than anything.
Legally you have restrictions. There are electronic ignition options that will help your altitude performance by advancing ignition timing. Consider one of those. I think around $4k to buy the unit, then whatever your A&P charges for install. You could also swap the prop that's on there for a coarser pitch prop. Hurts your takeoff and climb slightly, but helps your cruise.
As far as the airframe, pay very close attention to drag. What antennas do you have? Can you switch to internal or something less draggy? Your external beacons/strobes are big source of drag that can be reduced. Last (but not least), look under the cowl and seal things up very well. So far this has gained me several knots on the 310 and I'm thinking it will gain more when I'm done, as there's a lot left.
Legalities aside, there's always 10:1 pistons or throwing in an IO-390 (or just angle valve cylinders on the 360). But neither of those are legal.
Or, you could buy an M20F, which will go faster without any speed mods or attention to detail than your Cherokee will go with all the speed mods and attention to detail. Until you start pushing the 170-200 KT realm, getting a different plane usually makes more sense. In my case, I'm working on de-dragging the 310, but there's really not another option that will do what I need to faster.
That's absurd.You could try a K&N air filter for about $200.
I have to ask, how much gas could you have purchased with the same amount that you spent on upgrades? I don't see the worth in aviation.
A K&N CAI will pay for itself within a few months. I can't imagine how long it would take to pay off those upgrades for the 310.
How would adding kerosene (that being essentially what a "naphthenic hydrocarbon" is) to your avgas improve compression?Thinking it might help compression a little.
Yes -- much better airflow through it. You must clean and re-oil it every 100 hours, but that's no big deal.Is the KN filter that much better than the Bracket currently installed?
Is the KN filter that much better than the Bracket currently installed?
Actually I didn't go into details of what I've done on the 310 so far. The ROI is a couple hundred hours on most of it for my utilization. Going through the cowls and sealing leaks is whatever a tube of Permatex Ultra Black costs.
Seems that way....
A five place Bo would be great, but hauling around 4 empty seats most of the time is my biggest hold back. If I trade up, it's a Bo or Saratoga which has been on my mind. My Archer is about as loaded as they come sans all glass and a step up would actually be a step down in panels. I can't afford what I have in the Archer panel if it were in a Bo. Makes it a tough call to sell her.
How would adding kerosene (that being essentially what a "naphthenic hydrocarbon" is) to your avgas improve compression?
Even assuming that theory is correct (which I do not accept without proof), what makes you think the addition of naphthenic hydrocarbons to your avgas will "fill the micropores of the cylinder"?Anything that fills the micro-pores of the cylinder bore wall is going to help out with compression IN THEORY.
You make it sound like it's a matter of faith rather than science, and that I'm ready to believe. I'm just not ready to believe MMO will do any of that without a scientific basis and independent research to back it.You're either an MMO devotee or you ain't.
Anything that fills the micro-pores of the cylinder bore wall is going to help out with compression IN THEORY.
You're either an MMO devotee or you ain't.
I can lead you, but I can't make you drink.
Absolute and complete bs. And this is the polite way to say this.
Take this from someone who actually does this for living
Seems that way....
A five place Bo would be great, but hauling around 4 empty seats most of the time is my biggest hold back. If I trade up, it's a Bo or Saratoga which has been on my mind. My Archer is about as loaded as they come sans all glass and a step up would actually be a step down in panels. I can't afford what I have in the Archer panel if it were in a Bo. Makes it a tough call to sell her.
Any way to squeeze this for more juice? O360 A4M is what I have. Power Flow doesn't make anything for it. I have all of Knots2u speed mods. Any way to squeeze this berry for more go?
Mill .030 off the the both the case and cylinder mating surfaces.
It would be far easier to just buy 10:1 pistons and throw those in.