Hello Joe and All,
For about two years, it appears to me that my engine is subject to what I call "unhappiness", especially when flying in
mild OAT and mostly high humidity. Since the occurrence of carb icing seemed to be very rare using the standard Sonex set-up with an AeroCarb, I thought it was
due to some other issue with the engine itself. I've been searching and investigating for all those months with no success in finding any apparent cause.
I've posted many e-mails on the Jabiru/CAMit forum about that and I've investigated so many things without finding something really wrong. Lately, I've removed #5 cylinder head and lapped the valves which where possibly slightly leaking, thinking I had found the culprit. Not at all... Two flights were done with a happy engine and the third, the unhappiness re-appeared. Prior to that, I replaced all the spark plugs and checked their internal electric resistance. Two had very high values whereas they should be close to one ohm.
This is how it usually goes. On the ground, nothing wrong. Engine starts quickly, run-up does not show anything wrong at all, ignition 0-10 rpm drop, sometimes.
Take-off and climbing are fine. #5 is the hottest cylinder and I have to climb at not more than 1000 ft/min if I want it to keep it below 145°C (290°F). This makes around 80 kts. At 5000 ft, level-off, tuning the mixture to have EGTs about 680-700 °C (1256-1292). Everything is fine... after a
few minutes into the cruise flight, typically like on last flight, 17 minutes, a
single burp comes. Then some EGT would up-drift and the engine would
no longer run as smooth but with some unhappiness,
losing perhaps 10 to 20 rpm, but not always. From that point, the unhappiness will usually stay for the remaining of the flight at most power settings above 2000 rpm. I must say, I rarely tried to apply full power under these conditions. Checked the ignitions, same as on the ground, good. This happened
4 times within the last 20 flights (around 20 hours), except that
sometimes, the unhappiness comes
without the initial burp. It seems to happen more when the
OAT is mild and the air is humid (last week it was hazy and 12°C (54°F)). The stunning point is that this phenomenon only appeared after 8 years that I fly my Waiex. Never before. True enough, the engine had its top end overhaul at 125 hours, back in 2012-13 and since then it runs cooler. But why did it work fine from 2013 to 2016, without the "unhappiness" if this was due to carb icing... Puzzling.
Also, back in the fall of 2016, I checked the AeroCarb and noticed there was a
slight notch in the metering orifice's side. I checked the same orifice two days ago and the side notches (both sides) seemed to have increased in size. It now
looks like a round face with two ears. The
metering needle is wobbling and thus laterally grinding into the Delrin orifice and I wonder if this would be the cause of the "unhappiness". To me it would be difficult to explain how, but perhaps the needle get trapped in the shallow notch, while reducing the setting from climbing WOT to cruise power, only on one edge which would twists the needle somehow and mis-distribute the fuel, or allowing the fuel to pour from the front round side of the needle, producing drifting EGTs and some slight roughness...
Has anybody else noted that the metering orifice geometry is affected by the needle?
This "unhappiness" of my engine appears every three to five flights, and after several engine mechanics told me my engine does not show signs of defaults, including those of Jabiru France, I'm interested to read that some other Sonex owners might have experienced some icing of their AeroCarb/Injectors. Actually, Art K told me about this thread on the Jabiru/CAMit forum.
Now, for those who like Joe experienced some presumable icing,
what were the atmospheric conditions when this occurred, e.g. humidity and OAT?As said, in my case, it is pretty much corresponding to the "serious" icing zone of the following website, except that it does not seem to happen below around 5°C (41°F).
http://www.ycem.com.au/b2/CarbIceV1.htmlThanks for any contribution.
Have Safe Fun!