Found them wrong right out of the rebuilder.Thanks. I would have hoped an engine shop would have gotten that detail right, but I guess you never know.
Somewhere this should be a sticky for O-200 owners - probably on the type club if it's not already. I've experienced the infamous engine stumble, once it was immediately following maintenance. Another time the power rolled back briefly turning base to downwind, the mechanic who'd just signed it off from annual blamed Champion spark plugs. Unfortunately I don't know if he ever checked for the presence of lock-O-seals.I have posted this advice four or five times over the last eleven years:
The O-200's carb is mounted to a carb "spider," a small manifold with four outlets. There are supposed to be Lock-O-Seal washers against the top and bottom of that spider on both studs, and the retaining nuts tightened FINGER TIGHT and cotter pinned. This lets the engine move without shaking the carb so much. Shaking causes fuel to slop from the carb bowl into the carb throat thru the bowl vent and makes for rough running and big rpm drops. We chased that issue for weeks on one 150 until I found that little paragraph in the overhaul manual. Installed the washers and it all cleared up.
And read this thread: https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/com...tent-loss-of-engine-power.70561/#post-1454186
It has the pump.Does the 0-200 have an accelerator pump? Her lil cousin the c85 does not, and in cold Wx especially if ya do not operate the throttle smoothly on the way to the firewall she will stumble... but i think youndo have the accelerator pump..
in cold Wx especially if ya do not operate the throttle smoothly on the way to the firewall she will stumble