CharlieTango
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2013
- Messages
- 878
- Location
- Mammoth Lakes, California
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CharlieTango
We are doing a hot flush on my oil cooler. My Rotax 912 ULS now gets hot oil temps when climbing.
This yellow material is a mystery, does anyone know what it is?
I'd probably send it to Rotax and ask them, but I'm paranoid that way.
Is it "hard" or "plyable"? What does it feel like?
Oil Additives and detergents, crystallized and burnt.
Nick,
Can you tell me more? Is that a guess or do you know?
Nick,
Can you tell me more? Is that a guess or do you know?
We are doing a hot flush on my oil cooler. My Rotax 912 ULS now gets hot oil temps when climbing.
This yellow material is a mystery, does anyone know what it is?
Condensation,mixing with the oil after shut down.
We are doing a hot flush on my oil cooler. My Rotax 912 ULS now gets hot oil temps when climbing.
This yellow material is a mystery, does anyone know what it is?
That was my guess since the engine is air cooled.Condensation,mixing with the oil after shut down.
I've never seen anything like that in the oil of a Rotax (or any other engine, for that matter). I do hope you plan to do an oil analysis.
I've uploaded a copy of Rotax's oil recommendations for the 912 series, in case you don't already have one. Nothing in there about yellow deposits, though.
How's the coolant look?
-Rich
That was my guess since the engine is air cooled.
Or perhaps someone left the dip stick out during a wash job or rain storm.
That was my guess since the engine is air cooled.
Or perhaps someone left the dip stick out during a wash job or rain storm.
I figured that out shortly after I posted.The 912s are liquid-cooled, by the way.
-Rich
That sounds better than my answer.I would also say these parts went through the oil system and ended up here before entering the filter. Your seeing a rise in oil temps because something is plugged and this part is running hot. It will not show up in water temp but will show up in oil temp. It could be a plugged passage in the crank and a main bearing is running hot or something like this.
Until you find out what this is, if it was mine, I would ground this airplane.
My 2 cents.
Tony
Until you find out what this is, if it was mine, I would ground this airplane.
My 2 cents.
Tony
That's what I would suspect except for the brightness of the yellow. Also, in my experience, water usually causes deposits that have a more fluid consistency, like mayonnaise or hand cream. The deposits in the picture look sort of crumbly to me.
-Rich
Yup. Water and oil make a chocolate-milk sort of gunk, sometimes more gray than brown. Never seen yellow like that. Would it be dye from glycol coolant?
Dan
Cheddar?
What, exactly, is involved in a "hot flush"?
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http://www.hotflusher.com/aerospace.cfmWhat, exactly, is involved in a "hot flush"?
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Wax from petroleum product ?
Possible. Paraffin wax is a common additive to multi-viscosity automotive oils. Not sure if they use it in aviation oil or not.
We use motorcycle oil in the Rotax
The 912s are liquid-cooled, by the way.
-Rich
Then paraffin wax build-up is a possibility. It would match the other symptom, the engine running progressively hotter over time.
Doesn't seem that likely since you were running full synthetic and now Aeroshell sport.Paraffin wax build-up seems the mostly likely answer so far.