rizzz wrote:mike.smith wrote:rizzz wrote:Went for a flight the other day and before going out I manually rotated the prop.
I noticed considerably less compression on 2 (#4 and #3 I believe) of the cylinders, also, I can hear a hissing in the exhausts during compression.
Leaky exhaust valves? Certainly showing all the symptoms…
You don't have the Nickasil cylinders, do you? If you say yes then I'll tell you what may be up. If you say no then disregard :-)
I have the Nicom cylinders from Hummel, they are essentially Nikasils (nickel silicon carbide) but I believe the NiComs have chrome in them as well or so I've read somewhere.
I did ask Scott about them when the whole AeroVee Nikasyl issue happened and he said he never had issues with his brand, he still puts them on his engines as far as I can see now.
But yes, the thought has crossed my mind... you had problems with yours didn't you?
mike.smith wrote:Yes. The walls of the cylinders were too thin to stand up to normal temperatures and torque values. The tops of the cylinders, where they contact the heads, were rolling over and mushrooming. So the heads were getting closer to the engine block each time I reset the torque, and that would decrease the gap between the valves and the rocker arms until they were in constant contact, making the valves leaky (they would never fully close). That also burned my first set of valves, but at the time I didn't understand what was happening, so I put the heads back on the bad cylinders after replacing the valves.
The real clues were twofold: 1. Every time I checked the torque on the heads the nuts had to move to get the torque to specs (on my cast iron heads the torque has stayed put, and the nuts have never needed tightening), and 2. regular oil analysis showed high levels of things like nickel (the nickasil) and iron (piston rings) and aluminum (the cylinder walls under the nickasil).
Here's my Kitlog entry.
http://www.mykitlog.com/users/display_l ... 380&row=38
Absolutely no issues since changing to cast iron cylinders.
radfordc wrote:Is there any value to the Nickasils other than the weight difference?
NWade wrote:N190YX wrote:Note you can only fly a TCM engine (and this should be considered for any aircraft engine) with leakage past an exhaust valve is after a boroscope inspection shows a normal exhaust valve.
Excuse me, can you please provide a citation for this? Saying you can "only" fly the engine implies that the procedure is mandatory.
If your source is the "Service Bulletin" that was referenced in the previous post, its worth noting that Service Bulletins are not mandatory (with a few narrow exceptions - including when they are incorporated into an AD and incorporated into a Users/Owners/Maintenance manual).
Thanks,
--Noel
P.S. I'm not trying to be a jerk; but the claim goes perfectly to my earlier point about well-meaning facts and careful explanations.
SonexN76ET wrote:One possible way to protect your valves from leaking early due to carbon fouling is to use Decalin or TCP fuel additives. I checked with Sonex before I started using it and while they do not explicitly recommend it, they did say people had reported good results with it. (Just be careful to read the directions as you put very little in to mix with ten gallons of 100LL, I am talking just a tablespoon or so per the directions.
rizzz wrote:
It's a shame about the quality of those nickasils currently on the market. Most are cheap chinese knock-offs.
I'm not sure where Hummel sources their NiComs though but I'm hoping for the best. They look quite different from the AeroVee and GP ones.
rizzz wrote:radfordc wrote:Is there any value to the Nickasils other than the weight difference?
It is claimed they cool better.
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