Challenged
Pattern Altitude
What technique do you employ if you're away from your engine for just long enough that things aren't clearly cold start / hot start? How long is the amount of time?
full power full lean, turn the fuel pump on and start cranking, once it acts like its trying to start go to idle and full rich at the same time. time wise? i dont know. its 100 degrees out every day so...tomorrow?
What technique do you employ if you're away from your engine for just long enough that things aren't clearly cold start / hot start? How long is the amount of time?
Hot start issues are a function of vapor in the lines firewall forward. So it depends on the engine. Injected Lycos don't have return/purge lines, therefore you can't flush the lines with cool fuel without flooding the engine. Some Continentals do (TSIO-360 for instance), so the use of the electric pump in order to refill the line with fuel is available, which is why they are easier to start than Lycos when heat soaked. In a lyco, once the thing has heat soaked, you have to flood it in order to get it to start. Either way, you're cranking way longer than Contis, but at least the starters are hella cheaper to replace.
Tio540, notorious for hot stars as the engine is upside down under the cowl.
Fuel pump on, idle cut off, throttle full open and crank. When she sparks and burbles, intro mixture and retard throttle. Sounds complicated but happens very fast. Once I learned the technique, I don't worry much about hot starts much anymore.
The Mooney M20F with the Lyco IO-360 was a B!TCH to hot start. Flood, idle cut off, and crank away at full throttle until it caught. The Arrow with the Conti TSIO-360 is easy. Leave throttle at 1,000 RPM at shut-down. Hot start, hit the starter and after a revolution or two bring the mixture to full rich. Engine starts and idles at 1,00 RPM.Hot start issues are a function of vapor in the lines firewall forward. So it depends on the engine. Injected Lycos don't have return/purge lines, therefore you can't flush the lines with cool fuel without flooding the engine. Some Continentals do (TSIO-360 for instance), so the use of the electric pump in order to refill the line with fuel is available, which is why they are easier to start than Lycos when heat soaked. In a lyco, once the thing has heat soaked, you have to flood it in order to get it to start. Either way, you're cranking way longer than Contis, but at least the starters are hella cheaper to replace.
For all you know he could be referring to his V-8 powered dildo.
Depends on the plane/engine, and yes on ambient temperature. In my Cardinal here in VT that would be a normal semi-cold start, minimal boost pump priming then crank. I have no idea though, if that technique would need modification in the heat down South. Up here it never (or rarely) gets that hot, and when it does I'm not flying anyway.Let's say I'm on a cross country and I mess around in the FBO, then I go to lunch, then my wife wants to check out a local attraction for an hour..so I get back to my plane after 3 hours or so. What sort of technique would you use after 3 or 4 hours of the plane sitting? How much does ambient temperature matter? Sometimes I get behind the controls and I don't know if my go-to procedure should be cold start or hot start, that's more of what I'm interested in.
Let's say I'm on a cross country and I mess around in the FBO, then I go to lunch, then my wife wants to check out a local attraction for an hour..so I get back to my plane after 3 hours or so. What sort of technique would you use after 3 or 4 hours of the plane sitting? How much does ambient temperature matter? Sometimes I get behind the controls and I don't know if my go-to procedure should be cold start or hot start, that's more of what I'm interested in.
The Mooney M20F with the Lyco IO-360 was a B!TCH to hot start. Flood, idle cut off, and crank away at full throttle until it caught.….
Groan!Get a coupl’a guys to push her than pop the clutch and let her rip.
For those fuel injected 172R/S, with everything off, try pushing throttle and mixture to full increase and count to 10 before the pre-start checklist. Then, proceed normally with the warm engine start checklist in the POH. (throttle cracked, mixture idle-cutoff, etc...). It works for me.
One of our 152's that sports the O-235 has been having some starting issues, to what is believed to be a carb problem and this isn't the first rodeo with an issue like this since I've been there. We have to do some funny things at times to get it to light off (carb heat on- mixture rich- throttle open). It's probably about time for a carb overhaul, but once it starts, it runs fine.my carb'd o-235 starts the same way hot or cold. non- issue in some planes and the real answer is engine/aircraft specific.
Let's say I'm on a cross country and I mess around in the FBO, then I go to lunch, then my wife wants to check out a local attraction for an hour..so I get back to my plane after 3 hours or so. What sort of technique would you use after 3 or 4 hours of the plane sitting? How much does ambient temperature matter? Sometimes I get behind the controls and I don't know if my go-to procedure should be cold start or hot start, that's more of what I'm interested in.
You’re in a Turbo Lance, correct?
Isn’t that the procedure for a flooded start? After multiple failed attempts at hot starts with our Turbo Lance, this is the procedure that works every time.
Throttle 1000
Fuel Pump OFF!
Engage Starter
Slowly Advance Mixture
Starts every time.
Any other attempts, especially with the fuel pump ON, will result in a flooded engine. Hard to start.
My 1941 Piper J4A (also 77 yrs old) w a C-85 and Marvel Schebler carb - When taxiing in shut off the fuel so the carb bowl is near empty while the engine cools down.Mags off, fuel off, throttle wide open, turn prop backwards 20+ times until the fuel stops running out onto the ground and there is no vapor coming out the exhaust.
Then fuel off, throttle closed, mags hot and yank the prop.
Repeat as necessary.
The ugly little secrets they don't mention about flying 77 year old "nostalgia" birds, when they are gushing over the glories of the taildraggers.
In Cub 159 there is no accelerator pump, no primer, and if you park it in the hot sun with the throttle closed tight and the fuel on, it will heat up and push all the fuel sitting in the lines and carb into the engine.
I recently had the chance to re-learn this valuable lesson.