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When I was doing my compressions I thought I heard a difference at the exhaust on cyl#2. I didn't think it was louder, just different. (my hearing has been tested and its ok) There are always several minutes between cylinders such I find it hard to remember what the last one sounded like. Also, there is definitely 'referred' sound in the exhaust from leakage past the rings; I have heard that on every engine I've ever been around during a compression test. I posted earlier; how could I verify or quantify leakage past an exhaust valve?
I tried two methods.
A) the cell phone dB meter method. At airplane-side, I downloaded SLA lite dB meter. I stuck the phone at the exhaust stack, trying to maintain the same position for each cylinder. I also put it over the open oil filler neck. Here are the readings:
Cylinder# /Compression (hot)
dB exhaust / dB oil filler
1/75 48/73dB
2/73 66/75
3/78 50/81
4/74 60/84
5/74 45/85
6/76 45/82
ambient dB in the room was 35-43dB
The exhaust noise was highest in cyl#2 (and it had one of the lowest oil filler readings) so I tried another Rube Goldberg test.
I pressurized it from the exhaust stack while it was at tdc compression stroke, I have a way of attaching a pressure regulator to the exhaust pipe (mainly used to inspect for leaks). I set it to about 7psi and watched how much air is coming from the spark plug hole via the compression testor adapter hose. Check out the videos of cyls 2 (and 6 for comparison). There is obviously way more bubbles being produced from cyl2.
I'd still like to actually measure the amount of leakage from the exhaust valve but that will either be later, or when someone takes my idea to the next stage!
(high-time IO-520, 800+ on Superior Milleniums, no changes in compressions over several years, 1qt/30yrs (edit; hours not yrs), no problems, running strong, filter looks normal, LOP at cruise but only cruise.)
Links to YT videos of 'bubbling':
ExValveCyl2
ExValveCyl6
Ex valve scopings attached in order 123456
Before I work on these valves, I will be scoping them again, in the open position to get a look at the sealing surface if I can.
I tried two methods.
A) the cell phone dB meter method. At airplane-side, I downloaded SLA lite dB meter. I stuck the phone at the exhaust stack, trying to maintain the same position for each cylinder. I also put it over the open oil filler neck. Here are the readings:
Cylinder# /Compression (hot)
dB exhaust / dB oil filler
1/75 48/73dB
2/73 66/75
3/78 50/81
4/74 60/84
5/74 45/85
6/76 45/82
ambient dB in the room was 35-43dB
The exhaust noise was highest in cyl#2 (and it had one of the lowest oil filler readings) so I tried another Rube Goldberg test.
I pressurized it from the exhaust stack while it was at tdc compression stroke, I have a way of attaching a pressure regulator to the exhaust pipe (mainly used to inspect for leaks). I set it to about 7psi and watched how much air is coming from the spark plug hole via the compression testor adapter hose. Check out the videos of cyls 2 (and 6 for comparison). There is obviously way more bubbles being produced from cyl2.
I'd still like to actually measure the amount of leakage from the exhaust valve but that will either be later, or when someone takes my idea to the next stage!
(high-time IO-520, 800+ on Superior Milleniums, no changes in compressions over several years, 1qt/30yrs (edit; hours not yrs), no problems, running strong, filter looks normal, LOP at cruise but only cruise.)
Links to YT videos of 'bubbling':
ExValveCyl2
ExValveCyl6
Ex valve scopings attached in order 123456
Before I work on these valves, I will be scoping them again, in the open position to get a look at the sealing surface if I can.
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