At the request of member Doug Raby, I am posting this for others to use as a reference. This is not intended to be technical support for AeroVee oil leaks, nor is it endorsed by Sonex Aircraft LLC or the Sonex Builders and Pilots Foundation as official advice. It is Doug's solutions shared with the Sonex community
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Right from the first run of my engine I had several oil leak issues to deal with. So, I'll try to give you the complete picture( as much as I can recall at this point) of the various things I did to seal up the engine.
Here are the areas that required attention on my engine:
- the oil pump
- pushrod tubes
- oil slinger
- valve covers
- rear main seal
Let me say that I got excellent help and advice from many expert builders during my testing. And, I had their high standards by which to measure my own progress. Both Robert Eley and Peter Van Schalkwyk, figured heavily in working through the problems. I know you know their planes and the quality of their work.
Let's deal with this issue first.
Credit is due for Steve Bennett via Peter for this.
This is a standard automotive oil seal. Ironically the ID is 2180 thousands.
Before I installed this there was a persistent seepage getting past the slinger and the auger built into the prop hub. I finally realized that I had too much clearance between the hub and one side of the case. The result was the auger was doing nothing.
Here's how it works. The engine is already built so there's no way to get a seal at this end of the engine. So what you do is cut right through the rubber and steel ring on one side of the seal and only cut the steel 180 degrees around the seal.
Then you can twist the seal and get it over the hub.
I polished the hub with some Scotchbrite to make a smooth bearing surface for the seal.
I pushed the seal up against the engine case and used a zip tie to gently squeeze the open ends of the seal back together.
Then I sealed up the whole thing against he engine with rtv. Next, I installed that nifty bracket that snugs the whole thing in place. The rtv bonds the seal to the case as well as the bracket, keeping the seal from spinning. I think I oriented the seal with the open end at nine o'clock so the bottom of the hub had 'good rubber' on it.
Make sure to lube the hub with a light coat of grease prior to seal installation so the seal doesn't burn up.
Initially I saw a bit of black residue as the seal got seated , but that was temporary.
This solved my oil leak at the slinger.
http://api.zenfolio.com/cdn/pub/cshedmfrurkc/0/null/mh/g8ol6-5iavbygcdcem6a/s6/v143/p576236548-5.jpg?sn=2YH&tk=07uFRDq5OVpYaeEXaMj940J3am7j-aHTplXt9KtX5lY=Robbie Culver
Sonex 1517
Chicagoland
Tails and Wings complete - finishing fuselage.
N1517S reserved