by Titanium Cranium » Fri Jul 06, 2018 4:54 pm
As the second owner of my plane, and with the original owner/builder having passed away before I purchased the plane, I've had to learn things about my plane and the Sonex design in general through experience and, luckily, though here. Kerry at Sonex tech support has been very helpful with answering the questions I've had, and while I haven't spoken to Sonex about this yet, I'm sure they'll be very helpful. I definitely understand the controversy over the whole "known issue" thing, but I also know that we can have two identical planes and have one produce a problem that the other doesn't. That's the nature of mechanical things, especially experimental. That's something I accept and I won't hold that against anyone on either side of the debate. For me, I'm not really concerned with the debate. I just appreciate the feedback you all have provided in helping me figure out what's wrong with my plane. Based on what I've been reading about the burp issue, it does sound like that may very well be what I have, but on a more continual vapor lock basis. I've had the burp on my plane in the past, although I didn't know that the very brief stumble I occasionally felt on my take off roll was known as a burp, or that it was a momentary vapor lock. I knew that it only happened if my plane had already been running and was hot, and I just figured that it was sensitive to how fast I applied full throttle. I aborted the first takeoff where I felt it, but when I tried it again, I applied full throttle slowly and smoothly, and I didn't feel it. I would only feel it if everything was hot and if I pushed the throttle too quickly. I know some planes are sensitive to that, so I just figured mine was too. On Thursday evening before my emergency landing, I did feel just a few stumbles on my 3rd leg of the day while cruising at 4500 ft, but when I adjusted my mixture slightly richer, it went away, but the engine and everything in the cowling was very hot from having flown almost 7 hours that day. On Friday, my first 2 legs went without incident, but also brought us from Oklahoma into New Mexico, where it was a hotter environment than I'd ever flown my plane in, and the density altitude was far higher than anything I'd ever done with it. The engine and cowling was very hot when we landed at KTCC, and we had just experienced about 2 1/2 hours of rough turbulence, so we parked the plane for a little over 2 hours and went to get some lunch. I figured that would cool things off a lot, but the plane was also sitting in the sun with the outside temperatures being 102 degrees. It was in the sunlight with it shining on my black glare shield the whole time. That definitely kept things hot during the break, and it only cooled off to 100 degrees outside by the time we departed. Everything was normal when we got in and started up. I did find that I had to give it slightly more throttle at that airport than normal (both after landing and before takeoff) but I figured that was normal considering the field elevation was about 4000 ft and the density altitude was 7800 when we landed and 7400 when we took off. I did a longer run-up than normal to check everything, mainly because I was flying into an area that was higher terrain, had very few airports, and I wanted to make sure I had leaned my mixture for the best performance possible with a 7400 ft density altitude. The plane performed better than I expected and was climbing nicely at about 200 ft/min at gross weight and at about 75 mph. All numbers looked great with my EGT being about 1200, my CHTs all being below 375, oil temp staying around 200, and with oil pressure being about 30. These numbers held pretty constant until shortly after we climbed through 6000 ft, which is when the engine stumbled a few times. I made the mixture richer as I had the evening before, but with no improvement, and leaning also had not smoothed the engine out. That's when I turned toward I-40 and started trying to make additional adjustments. Pulling back the throttle a bit didn't seem to help, and adding full throttle didn't either. That's when I got ATC on the radio to report engine troubles. As I descended, the engine started to stumble even more and became notably worse, which is when I declared the emergency to ATC. After pulling the plane off the runway in the crazy winds and making a couple phone calls, I was exhausted, so I decided to see if the engine would start again, and it did, just as it had prior to takeoff. I was able to taxi under power to a hangar near the FBO and shut it down without any issue. Based on my knowledge of vapor lock (admittedly not a vast knowledge by any means) and based on the understanding of the brief stumbles I experienced numerous times before, it sure seems like the common burp was turning into a full-blown vapor lock condition. I do plan on pulling the Aerocarb apart to clean it, and I may go ahead and bypass the gascolater so I can fly it home, then install the burp line setup. I'd like to install the burp line before flying it back, but I'm sure I'll end up running into some fittings that I'll need, and the nearest hardware store would be at least 200 miles away. I definitely want to do a good amount of ground runs under power for at least 15 minutes, and do a solid hour of flying around the field before I'd be comfortable flying it home, but I think that it'll be good if I focus on pulling the cowling for a bit to let things cool down longer at fuel stops.
Tom Hilsdorf
N37YX
Dayton, OH