Returning to the main topic:
I tried a few more things today, and I have DATA! (...Always superior to anecdotes)
I added a bunch of tracerline dye to my fuel tank last night. I also plumbed in a mechanical boost gauge (leaving the RDAC out of the loop), using strong/stiff tubing. After warming the oil, I performed a couple of brief-but-smooth applications of WOT (followed by a minute of idle). Here's what I observed:
- RPMs climbed to 3050 and refused to go higher, per my usual results.
- The mechanical boost gauge refused to budge above 3 psi. This works out to approximately 6" of MAP. With an ambient pressure of 29.68 this put me right into the same 35.5" to 35.8" range I have seen on the MGL.
- I wheeled the airplane inside and used the special flashlight and glasses from the Tracerline kit. While it clearly showed oil spots from my previous oil-cooler blowout, as well as the minor oil weeping I'm getting out of my oil pump cover and left-side head bolts/case-savers, I saw zero spots of glowing dye around the intake elbows, tubes, silicone sleeves, turbo body, or intake down-tube.
From this I concluded that my RDAC/EFIS is reporting pressures correctly and I'm not dealing with an instrumentation error. I also am not dealing with an intake leak that opens up under positive pressure. I plumbed the RDAC MAP sensor back into the turbo intake, took a deep breath, and did something slightly scary: I disconnected the wastegate actuator and safety-wired the wastegate closed. I let the engine sit and cool until the CHTs were reading around 100 again, then I wheeled her out for another engine run.
I was
very concerned about over-boosting the engine, so I didn't even take her to WOT. All I did was idle the engine for 30 seconds (since the oil was still at 90+ degrees from the previous run), smoothly throttle up to 2400 RPM and let the readings settle for 3-5 seconds, and then I began creeping up on the throttle smoothly. I gently walked it up over 2800 RPM (where the MAP starts to go higher than BARO). From there I solely focused on watching the MAP reading. I have no idea what RPMs I got to, but as I crept forward with the throttle lever I saw the MAP climb up smoothly through 35, then 36, and creep up towards 37. Knowing that I was above the highest reading I'd ever seen, I swiftly and smoothly throttled back down to idle. The MAP reading peaked at 37.2 and then fell back as the RPMs dropped quickly.
Based on this result, I'm 99% sure I have a wastegate actuator problem. I'm not sure if I am failing to put enough tension on the actuator arm (despite the "no preload" warning in the instructions), or if I have an issue with the diaphragm or spring inside my actuator. But whatever it is, taking that unit out of the loop definitely allowed the engine to hit boost levels its never shown before.
My next plan of attack is to remove the safety wire, connect the actuator back up to the turbo while shortening the arm by 1/2 to 1 turn, and then perform 1 more engine run. If I am able to get close to 40" of MAP with that configuration, I'll assume I've solved the issue. If I still don't get more than 35.5" of MAP, then I'm returning the actuator and asking for a fresh one! :-P
Take care,
--Noel