by berger » Tue May 15, 2018 2:19 pm
Hi OneX 107,
Thank you for your input, especially about the sequence of the carb icing event. This rang a bell in me and I came up with the following thoughts:
This thread leaned toward carb icing a few days ago, and now, after a finer analysis of carb icing symptoms, this seems unlikely because the initial burp that I sometimes experience, if it was a piece of ice being ingested, should come after the rising of some EGT and slight roughness, as OneX 107 mentioned. What I notice is reverse, whereas the initial burp is not always present.
Putting the parts flat on the table:
1/ The unhappiness does appear sporadically (every 3 to 5 flights), especially when the OAT is mild, not when it is near (or below) freezing. Perhaps when it is humid, but lately, I flew for several minutes in a light rain with no symptoms.
2/ The phenomenon has (at least) once disappeared after I performed some aerobatics.
3/ The AeroCarb seems to be in a good shape except for the metering orifice which is scored and the scoring seems to have increased since the fall of 2016. The comparison of the (poor quality) pictures I took back then and now seem to show so. The orifice is no longer circular but has two shallow lateral ears ground by the sharp edges of the wobbling needle. The fuel flow through the orifice is tested as abundant.
4/ Even though the symptoms are similar, the sequence of the events do not speak for carb icing. Also, it seems very seldom with the typical Sonex-AeroCarb installations. Kerry is very formalized about this point.
5/ Gary Motley went thru a similar problem on his first AeroCarb after several hundred hours of operation and the issue disappeared when he replaced his carb by a new one. It seems that the orifice also had some wear. Lacking info here, somehow.
6/ Kai mentioned that what came out of the needle controlled orifice, was not gas vapor but a solid stream of gasoline which needs the warmth of the sump to eventually vaporize.
I see now three different scenarios:
A/ There is some vapor lock. The initial burp might speak for it, as well as the mild OAT required to see the unhappiness. Why would this happen now that the engine is running cooler than within the first 125 h (prior to top end and conversion) + 155 h (from top end to beginning of Unhappiness) remains a mystery. Aerobatics might evacuate the bubbles.
B/ The worn orifice is making a lousy job at spreading the fuel evenly, producing the symptoms. But the mild OAT speaks against this scenario, whereas my recent experiments with a razor blade dragged on a similar piece of Delrin might show that the blade bites into the Delrin at an angle which is less pronounced when the Delrin is warm than cold. Aerobatics might shake the needle in a more centered location.
C/ A combination of both A/ and B/
Any criticisms or comments on the above is welcome to eventually find the way out.
Or, on a humorous note, take your pick!
Thanks to all for your contributions.
Sosthène
Sosthène BERGER
Waiex s/n W0026 – T/D – HB–YMY – Jabiru 3300 – AeroCarb – Sensenich W54SK-64G
Maiden Flight 22nd July 08