by Titanium Cranium » Tue May 30, 2017 11:41 pm
I've read through some of the threads here about CHT/EGT issues. I've tried pretty much everything I read about so far with no luck. I figured I'd check here before I seek help from Sonex tech support because I know some of you have dealt with similar issues. My rear cylinders, especially my right rear cylinder (3#), get too hot any time I climb. Even on cool 50 degree mornings, I can't climb more than 1000 feet after takeoff before my #3 cylinder CHT hits 425. It has jumped to 450 a few times briefly until I leveled off and throttled back a tad. My left rear (#1) cylinder gets up to 425, but at least doesn't go over like #3 (although maybe it would if I tried to keep a climb going.) I still hit those temps while climbing at 85-90 mph. On 70 degree days, my CHTs are spiking like that by the time I make it 700 feet above ground. My front cylinders do great (usually around 375 during climb), and my rear cylinders do just fine while in cruise at 3100-3200 RPMs. During climb at WOT, I'm usually seeing 3000 RPMs and density altitudes have been between 500-1500 feet when I'm getting these readings. Leaning my mixture hasn't made any difference in my CHTs, just my EGTs a bit. During my climb when I'm seeing the high CHTs, my EGTs are reading between 1050-1150 depending on how much I lean my mixture. Once I cool off a bit after I reach pattern altitude, I can maintain CHTs of 415 and under for the rear cylinders if I climb at 100 mph, at a rate of only about 100 ft/min, without being WOT, and this is while I was flying solo with full fuel (935 lbs total weight at takeoff).
Just to give you an idea of my set-up, I have an early model Aerovee (serial #250) that was build precisely per the manual. The builder was meticulous, so I'm sure it was done correctly. The front CHT probes are mounted just beside the spark plugs (the hold drilled into the heads like recommended), but the rear cylinder probes measure directly from the spark plugs. I'm not sure if this is making the rear cylinders read hotter than they actually are, but the slight sputtering I experienced when I first bought the plane and noticed this while trying to climb 3000 feet steadily seems to suggest a possible pre-ignition of the fuel in the cylinder making it rough for a couple seconds. That would be consistent with tempts that are too high. The Sonex air baffling kit was installed and has a snug fit around the cylinders to guide the air through the cylinder fins. I tried decreasing the oil level a bit (I thought it was possibly overfilled a tad), increased the oil level to just higher than it was when I purchased the plane, none of which made a difference. The oil cooler inlet (bottom mounted oil cooler) was mostly closed off (it is now a small circle about 2" in diameter), and my oil temps are consistently 185-195. I opened up the exhaust opening/outlet in the bottom of the cowling and have almost doubled the size of the opening (probably about 9" x 10" opening now). I even tried switching to the NGK plugs that I've seen mentioned hoping to get a little more even and consistent fuel burn. The only change I made that helped a bit was opening up the exhaust outlet, which kept it from spiking up to 450, but it hasn't given me the ability to climb steadily unless at only 100 ft/min. I know other Aerovee owners have had great success with no issues, so I'd really like to hear from anyone who has ideas about what I can do to try to gain the normal performance that my plane should have.
Tom Hilsdorf
N37YX
Dayton, OH