by Arjay » Mon Jun 10, 2024 2:03 pm
Bryan had stated:
"hambone had mentioned that in a climb he got over 400, and then cooled to 330 or so. On my Aerovee I rarely get over 300 and I typically cruise with the hot cylinders in the mid 200s. One major difference we noticed was the baffles. They sealed ok against the cowl, but there were a lot of gaps where the sheetmetal met the engine. Not sure if that was as built by Derrick or as redone by the second owner, but the tabs that form the back corners were loose or hacked up. The back right side had a huge gap - you could drive a truck through it. Also the rear baffles were not tucked into the cooling tins. Up front there was a large gap forward of the heads. I think all the time I spent to seal that stuff, either with sheetmetal or a gallon of red RTV, was worth it."
I bought my legacy Sonex, with Aerovee, from the second owner. Originally, I had no particular cooling issues, but they started when I replaced the CHT probes (one failed and I replaced both). Now, I can never keep the CHT under 400 F on climb out. Even step climbing at 70 mph, 2800 or so RPM, it always goes over 400. I will level off and richen the mixture and get it down into the 390's, then climb some more, while it goes over 400 during the climb. Ususally, after about 30-40 minutes into the flight, the CHT will come down a little so and I can keep it under 400, then.
We have tried several things to help this: opened up the air inlet and outlets in the cowl, partially closed off the inlet to the bottom oil cooler, and taped off the side NACA opening in the cowl that was only feeding air into the bottom area under the engine, checked the baffles around the engine, etc. These changes have helped a little, but the problem, although improved, is still evident. Not having built the plane, myself, I don't have the knowledge and/or building skills to know what to do to solve this. I NEED SOME HELP. (And I suspect I'm not alone).
Bryan, you have obviously worked miracles with your installation. I am so envious of what you and Adam have achieved with your low CHT's. Would you mind sharing the details of how you did it? Could you provide details, including pictures, of what you did to get such low CHT numbers? Where did you put that gallon of red RTV? What are the dimensions of your cowl air inlets and outlets? Can you show us how you sealed the air box around your engine, including baffles, seals, closed gaps, etc.?
Thank you so much. I am sure you have and will continue to help many of us with this issue.
Ron
Legacy Sonex taildragger with Aerovee, Rotec TBI, modified Anson tailwheel