Bryan Cotton wrote:BRS wrote:Bryan, I've always wondered how you keep your cyl so cool. Mine (R2300) tend to run about 390 on climb and 360 in cruise (2700-2900 rpm). Oil is around 160. Where are your CHT probes located? My baffles are well sealed and cylinders all wrapped.
Under the top spark plugs.
BRS wrote:This might explain a bit of difference. My CHT probes are mounted in the head just above the exhaust manifold.
Bryan Cotton wrote:BRS wrote:This might explain a bit of difference. My CHT probes are mounted in the head just above the exhaust manifold.
http://www.aeroconversions.com/support/ ... nstall.pdf
Sonex instruction sheet says under the plug or close to it.
BRS wrote:Yup! Revmaster vs Aerovee design choices. I'll probably not take the time but it would be interesting to mount a temporary probe like in the aerovee instructions just to see how different the two locations are.
Jester504 wrote:NACA did at least two studies in the 40s investigating the relationship between CHT, EGT, valve temperature, and valve condition. They had to create custom valves with thermocouples in them. The results proved that valve temperature correlates nicely with EGT (but 150-200 F lower) and not CHT as many think.
Here's a link to the first: https://www.abbottaerospace.com/downloa ... rmocouple/
Kai wrote:Unfortunately it is not known where exactly in the exhaust pipe NACA would have located an EGT probe, so we are still more or less in the dark.
WesRagle wrote:Agreed. But... at that one point, stoichiometric/peak, EGT has special value. If you can use EGT to tune an EFI unit such that EGTs all peak at the same mixture setting, that's pretty cool. EGT then get's demoted to a cross check parameter and from that point forward you can operate your engine by mixture according to flight regime. I think that, along with an EGT limit set below spec, will help me manage/keep me from abusing the engine.
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