dtwolcott wrote:Those of you that are testing the CHT temperatures by shutting off one or the other ignition sources and are seeing lower temps on one or the other might need to give some consideration to the possibility that the fuel may not be burning completely do to not have both plugs firing. This might cause the CHT to be lower do to an inefficient fuel burn in the cylinders. Do you also see a slight reduction in RPM or airspeed?
Don't know but it may be a cause and effect situation.
dtwolcott wrote:Those of you that are testing the CHT temperatures by shutting off one or the other ignition sources and are seeing lower temps on one or the other might need to give some consideration to the possibility that the fuel may not be burning completely do to not have both plugs firing.
XenosN42 wrote:Here are the numbers I experienced last Sept. in an AeroVee/XENOS flight. The outside air temp was 85 degrees on the ground & 75 at altitude. The engine had been run 153 hours.
Looks like the order of which cylinder was the hottest to coolest was the same for your aircraft and mine.
My engine temps have been very stable the last two years. Once I'm established in cruise the numbers don't move a noticeable amount.
-- Michael
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