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Thanks for the offer Bobby.
But I had a heck of a time just welding on the small EGT threaded
bungs (even warped the manifold plate). I don't see how there
would be room for O2 bungs on the stock exhaust manifold.
Finn
On 4/29/2021 9:29 AM, Bobby Hughes BHughes@qnsinc.net wrote:
Finn,
I
did a lot of testing / tuning trying to get my EGT’s
balanced. If I balanced for full power then my cruise
settings would have a large spread. Changing my electric
prop rpm a little would narrow the spread. I even welded a
wideband O2 bung on each runner for grounding tuning. I
could balance the F/A at 30-38” MP and have my EGT’s match
within a couple of degrees. With this balanced I would see
an 80-100F spread at 4800 rpm. Less spread at 5200 rpm, etc.
F/A managed to keep the EGT’s in the low 1600’s at full
power. Lean cruise in the mid-1500’s.
I
have a portable dual wideband O2 kit you can borrow if you
have room to weld in bungs for testing.
Bobby
From:
Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2021 7:44 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: EGT probes location
Thanks Neil, Steve, Matt and Charlie.
I did try to get tip of probes centered in the openings, but
now I remember that a very slight difference made a
significant difference in readings during initial engine
runs.
So I think I'll ignore it for now (and set the alarm
higher). Then later on I can try to adjust the front/rear
rotor fuel ratio. Perhaps watching fuel flow vs RPM will be
a better way to optimize this?
Definitely a disadvantage to using the stock exhaust
manifold. The ideal setup would probably be separate (outer)
runners, perhaps with an O2 sensor in each runner.
Finn
On 4/28/2021 7:21 PM, Matt Boiteau mattboiteau@gmail.com
wrote:
Cyl 1 will be hotter since it gets the
coolant the last. I can be anywhere from 50-100f
difference sometimes.
I think too, with our high temperatures, the accuracy of
the probes probably have a good amount of +/- in there.
Hi Finn
Yes.
An example of our EGT’s at WOT take off - Lambda ~0.9 /
AFR 13.3
1598 & 1679 - So 81 higher.
I’m not sure our EGT probes are inserted exactly the
same distance into the header.
Not sure the variation in temp this might cause.
One of our probes is burnt out now.
Cheers
Steve Izett
> On 29 Apr 2021, at 5:30 am, Finn Lassen
finn.lassen@verizon.net <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
wrote:
>
> So, I'm using the Renesis stock exhaust manifold.
>
> Tried to mount the EGT probes as close as possible
and same distance from the ports.
>
> However, at high power I'm seeing as much as 120F
higher on rotor 2.
>
> Exhaust gas from rotor 1 passes by rotor 2 exhaust
port so I'm wondering if that somehow increases rotor 2
EGT readings.
>
> Caught my attention today when EGT2 got above
1,800F at 6,200 RPM and 161 mph TAS @ 3,300' density
altitude.
>
> Any of you that's using the stock exhaust manifold
run into this?
>
> Finn
>
>
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