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Final Approach
A couple of weeks ago I started my engine (IO360-A1B6) and noticed that it acted for a couple of moments as if it were about to quit, then it smoothed out and ran fine. However, during run up when I pulled the throttle back to idle, it DID quit. I had my mechanic check it out thoroughly. The dx: an induction leak on #4 and fuel injectors that were oriented every which way, his mistake at annual. So last week he fixed the induction leak and reoriented the injectors and then said, go fly it.
Well when I flew it this weekend I didn't like what I saw at all. First of all, the engine RPM quickly dropped about 15 seconds after start, just like the previous time. Then I noticed that in cruise the #1 EGT was about 60 degrees above where it had been prior to his adjustment, and was now higher than #3 which has ALWAYS had the highest EGT in cruise. My JPI was reporting DIFFs of 90-110 degrees in cruise, though only 40-50 at 1800 RPM during runup. Before I was consistently seeing 40-60 degrees DIFF both during runup and in cruise. All the other cylinders are running about where they were as far as I can tell: the difference is that #1 is running significantly warmer. The CHTs do not seem to have changed at all, as far as I can tell.
My concern is that the #1 valve or valve guide might be damaged from having stuck at some point and that fuel is now burning where it shouldn't, and that my engine's hesitation after starting could be morning sickness. Although my A&P is willing to do the wobble test to rule that out, I really had to talk him into it. He says that sticking valves are very rare in Lycoming engines. That part conflicts with everything I've read. What say folks here? And what else would you suggest we look at? He plans to disassemble my fuel injection system and check for obstructions and leaks everywhere he can check.
If it matters, the engine is about 200 hours since zero time.
Well when I flew it this weekend I didn't like what I saw at all. First of all, the engine RPM quickly dropped about 15 seconds after start, just like the previous time. Then I noticed that in cruise the #1 EGT was about 60 degrees above where it had been prior to his adjustment, and was now higher than #3 which has ALWAYS had the highest EGT in cruise. My JPI was reporting DIFFs of 90-110 degrees in cruise, though only 40-50 at 1800 RPM during runup. Before I was consistently seeing 40-60 degrees DIFF both during runup and in cruise. All the other cylinders are running about where they were as far as I can tell: the difference is that #1 is running significantly warmer. The CHTs do not seem to have changed at all, as far as I can tell.
My concern is that the #1 valve or valve guide might be damaged from having stuck at some point and that fuel is now burning where it shouldn't, and that my engine's hesitation after starting could be morning sickness. Although my A&P is willing to do the wobble test to rule that out, I really had to talk him into it. He says that sticking valves are very rare in Lycoming engines. That part conflicts with everything I've read. What say folks here? And what else would you suggest we look at? He plans to disassemble my fuel injection system and check for obstructions and leaks everywhere he can check.
If it matters, the engine is about 200 hours since zero time.
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