by Rynoth » Tue Dec 29, 2020 8:55 pm
I'm not sure Graeme, you're probably more correct than I am on the chemistry. My evidence so far is only anecdotal and flight/mx logs, and so far I'm on the side that TCP may not be great for the Turbo. If I don't have any more sticking issues going forward I can only think of 2 reasons it would be the case: 1) my turbo is finally fully broken in (and happened to coincide with when I stopped adding TCP), or 2) TCP was causing the sticking. Or both.
Just to add a bit more context to the "sticking", basically the turbo is essentially siezed in place before flight (NEVER in-flight.) Easily detectible during a quick throttle-up during a runup (manifold pressure wouldn't go above 30".) I was having the problem so consistently that if the plane sat more than 2 weeks before a flight I'd pull off the cowling and check the turbo manually by removing the intake manifold hose (I got really good at it, could pull cowl, disconnect hose, check/free turbo, replace hose/cowl in under 15 minutes.) Sometimes it would free with just my finger, but usually I had to put a socket on it to get just enough force to break it free, then spin it with my finger a dozen or so times and it would be totally freed up. If it was a week or less between flights the turbo was always free. This, to me, was an indication of a rust deposit versus oil coking or whatnot. Once it was free it was totally free and flew great.