-----Original Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Bill Bradburry
Sent: Friday, October
16, 2009 3:19 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Stoich
A/F Ratio?? : [FlyRotary] Re: where's the missing power?
Thanks Al and Ed!
Al, does that mean that you have values in the bins
located between about 17 and 48?
Yes. 0 is the default value; so
when you get your unit, all the values will be 0. When you tune your
engine is this regime; those values will go + or – as needed to a max of
127 each way. If the numbers are at the extreme, you’ll need to
adjust mode 3.
Do you have the EM2 or EM3? Put
the thing in auto tune mode, and slowly advance the throttle from idle on up. Each
bin number will appear in turn and you will see which bin it is using, and what
the correction value is. Keep it on each bin number until the correction
value is stable. Actually I found autotune made it a bit too lean down in
the idle range (up to about 1500 – 1700 rpm), so I set those manually.
I think it tunes it to stoichometric; so
if you do this with the mixture knob at 12:00; max power mixture may
be at about 1:30 or 2:00, and lean cruise over toward 10:30.
Ed, with the bins showing 0, I don’t know how
you would be certain which bin to correct if the rpm dropped and the engine
started to run rough. You would have no way of knowing which bin was
screwed up.
Hopefully, Tracy will return soon and can clear this
up.
Bill B
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Al Gietzen
Sent: Friday, October 16, 2009 7:34
PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Stoich
A/F Ratio?? : [FlyRotary] Re: where's the missing power?
My question was: if the MAP table gives 14.7 A/F
ratio with the manual knob in the 12:00 oclock position, what would be the most
likely A/F ratio with the knob all the way clockwise? Does it have the
capability of richening it to 12.65??
The
short answer is “Yes, and beyond”.
Now I have more questions. I went over and
copied down the information in my MAP table today. I was surprised to
learn that the manifold pressures for all addresses from 0 to 63 were set to
Zero. I expected to find actual manifold pressures in there.
My
understanding is that in that range of the table it chooses the table address
based on rpm. Once you tune it in that range the correction numbers will
likely not be 0.0. For my setup it never uses cells below about 17-18, or
above about 47-48 where the rpm and MAP fall outside the range; so those cells
are 0.
I also discovered that staging was not set. At
least, there is never an astrick showing up above the V in Volt. I assume
I can not change the staging unless the engine is running??? All
this was done with the engine not running if that matters for any of the data.
You
will not see an * unless you are in track mode with the engine running.
The stage point can only be set with the engine running, and at the MAP where
you want it to stage.
My Renesis engine has not been torn down, so it still
has the factory nominal timing setting. Does anyone know what this
setting is?? The timing adjustment setting on the EC-2 is set to
Zero. Due to some of the recent discussions on timing, I am thinking that
may have been a factor in not making as much power as others when static
running. I have been only able to get 53-5400 rpm, while others could get
over 6000.
Set
the timing as instructed in the EC2 manual. Assuming you have 2.85:1
redrive you should have over 6000 static rpm (I’d say closer to 7000); if
2.17:1 you’re about right.
Hope
this helps,
Al G