by Szaba » Sat Sep 07, 2019 9:49 am
RE Rough running revmaster, we had a number of rough-running squawks with our Revmaster 2300. Below is my best recollection of them all, they may be nothing to do with your situation but it may give you some ideas.
Early on the engine always seemed hard to start and after first flight we had a good look at the engine as it seemed to be not running smoothly particularly at low RPM. We looked at plugs and they were OK. We eventually found that one of the 2 hall effect sensors was damaged when a magnet had come loose after a retaining wire broke on the little timing wheel. We had an early 2300 and Revmaster had redesigned the timing wheel with glue holding the magnet rather than wire and sent us the upgrade at no charge with a replacement hall effect sensor. No problem since with the timing wheel but that did not seem to actually cure the rough running or starting issue. A switch to 100LL seemed to help but not cure the problem.
It turned out to be timing advance..... The mark on our prop flange showing advance was not in the correct location causing the timing to be a bit too advanced. We determined and marked correct position on our prop flange when we took the plugs out to check for fouling as we could observe the motion of the pistons position with a plastic rod held through the spark plug hole while the prop was turned by hand. The Rough running and hard to start problem was resolved. It started fine ran much much better although I would add EGT was noticeably uneven in flight.
After 20 or so hours we experienced a new intermittent rough running issue on an away flight but we did make it back safely to the field. Before each flight with engine at idle we test earthing each of the 4 ignition circuits and sometimes that showed one of the redundant circuits was not working (engine rough running) which led to a return to the hangar and much head scratching. The revmaster 2300 electronic ignition is attached to the back of the engine by 4 machine screws. We sent the ignition box back to Joe at Revmaster a few times and he could find nothing wrong! We ended up connecting a big earth cable from the ignition box itself to bat negative as we suspected the machine screws were not a great electrical connection. This seemed to do the trick as the issue went away and several months of enjoyable flying were had. At this time we also put in a fuel/air ratio sensor and went for the ROTEC carb which has improved our EGT with almost no differential in EGT left and right. We are able to set the mixture exactly right in all modes of flight with the fuel air ratio sensor and this helps manage temps too.
After 120 hours or so we started experiencing intermittent rough running again very similar to the 20 hour issue. earth was good so we decided to go for the upgraded Revmaster printed circuit ignition. We found this new unit to skip at high power and individual circuits did not behave correctly when earthed so we sent the unit back to revmaster and they found a manufacturing fault where some connections were not made correctly. Although Revmaster fixed the problem we decided to go for the SDS ignition instead. A friend at our airfield has just done his first flight in his Revmaster 2300 Sonex with SDS ignition and we are impressed with the quality and programming capabilities with the SDS unit. A few lycoming powered RV-6 at our field have the SDS ignition. We feel that this critical bit of kit needs to be of the highest quality and reliability, given our history we just didnt want to play with the Revmaster ignition any more. We really like the engine mechanically, but we are not a fan of the standard ignition system.
Good luck with your Onex! Once you get the revmaster right its a great match to these airframes.