by sonex1566 » Mon Feb 14, 2022 6:33 am
Hi Paul and everyone else who took an interest in this experiment,
I stumbled down a rabbit hole which has turned into the Bing rabbit hole not the Aerocarb rabbit hole! As to whether I made the right choice or not is hard to tell, I'm not sure myself. Originially I fitted an Aerocarb to my Jab 3300. As you know, the Aerocarb is easy to adjust, however getting it even across the rev range can be a bugger. My problem was that I wasn't getting even fueling between the front 4 and rear 2 cylinders. I tried a 2" intake extension in which I copied the shape of the original Jabiru fitting where I had to do a bit of creative shaping on my el-cheapo milling machine to fabricate it. After that work, plus fiddling around with different needles in the Aerocarb, it was better but I still wasn't happy......
Now this is where you get to choose which rabbit hole to go down.....In the Jabiru manual they state that to never exceed 1300 degrees F EGT. With the Aerocarb I was dilligently trying not to exceed this figure, however, after one flight someone on the ground commented that I was leaving a trail of black smoke. It also sounded rich, plus the soot on the bottom of the fuselage. I was getting almost 1300 on the front 4 whilst the rear two were in the 1100's. This was the point at where I spat my dummy out (I apologise for my Australianism). I put the original Bing carby as supplied and ran from Jabiru. As you know, it takes about 5 mins to swap the carbies over and about a month of stuffing around changine throttle directions, choke cables, fuel pumps, electric backup pumps and wiring. Phew!
Now Jabiru states to not exceed 1300 degrees, well straight out of the box my temps went to over 1500 degrees at Full throttle and not much less and any throttle setting more than 1/4. I believe that my EGT probes are generally telling the truth, but I can't accurately judge it. I swapped one over from my old AeroVee and got similar numbers. Not identical, but close enough. If it wasn't such a pain in the bum to change from the Bing to the Aerocarb I think that I would have stuck with the Aerocarb......well maybe!
Now in the 'Olden days', you could obtain a nifty plastic tray that contained a whole range of jets and jeedles for a particular brand of carby. It was easy to swap needles and jets until you got your tuning right. However, in Australia they just simply don't exist anymore. It's really expensive and shipping costs and shipping times are just broken. So instead, I spent $20 on some bar stock and proceeded to make 4 main jets, 4 needle jets and in the end 7 needles. Just changing the main jet from the STD 2.85mm to a 2.90 mm made the engine stutter and run too rich at WOT. It doesn't matter what size the main jet is, it has zero effect until you go from about 7/8 to full throttle. I then experimented with enlarging the needle jet. The STD is 2.90mm, I went all the way to 3.20mm. This instantly transformed my half and 3/4 throttle mixtures, however completely stuffed up my idle and especially the off idle and 1/4 you need when taxing. Fowled plugs, and pushing the bloody thing back to the hangar! Now for all you smarties out there who say, why don't you just raise the height of the needle? Well I can tell you......DON'T EVEN THINK ABOUT IT! If you raise the needle above the std Jabiru setting, at full throttle the needle can come out of the needle jet and get stuck on the edge and hold the slide wide open. Amazingly the engine still runs OK even down to about half throttle, but oh boy are you in trouble when you need to land. I have a successful, dead stick landing to my credit after the engine cut whilst turning base. Luckily the only pain suffered was the surgical removal of the seat cushion from my arse. Lesson 1 learned.
The end result which is now working really well over all the rev ranges is a new larger diameter needle, which has the high speed end lengthened which has the same effect of raising the needle, and then a constant 5 degree taper up to the 'idle' diameter of 2.60mm. I arrived at this measurement, by giving up trying to work out the resultant area and just make the needle the full 2.80mm diameter and machine a couple of thou off in two goes until the engine would idle and throttle up smoothly.
So after all of my fluffing around, my OCD is finally satisfied! I think that with the Bing the air/fuel seems to flow better within the plenum chamber into each of the intake manifolds. If I had a second Sonex, I would experiment with fitting maybe a butterfly or some sort of disruption within the intake trumpet to mix up the airflow a bit. One of the blokes I know has installed a single fuel injector body which replaces the carby and he had similar issues with unevern EGT's. Another friend installed the SDS multipoint EFI system which after a lot of messing around works beautifully. The big issue he has is that he can't start the engine on the EFI as the battery voltage drops too low at cranking and turns off the EFI ECU. Which means starting it with the Rotec throttle body and then switching over to the EFI once the engine is running. It has taken many, many hours of experimenting but I've finally got there. I'd be very interested to see how others have faired. So I'm not sure whether I've been a smart guy who has wasted a lot of time doing something a bit dumb or a dumb bloke who has stumbled onto a smart fix for the problem. Whatever the answer is, I have provided plenty of entertainment for the Airport experts where I spend far too much time!
Richard
Scratch build Sonex
Std gear, dual control
Jabiru 3300, Sensenich prop
19-8776
1st Flight 25th June 2019. 170 hrs so far.....
http://www.sonex1566.com