Good progress today. Bottom
line is I found that one of the temp probe wires was disconnected. While
looking into everything, I also swapped the two vacuum leads at the EC2, just
in case there was an issue with one of them (like it was pinched or cut) but
that had no effect. I have also reset all modes of the EC2 (1,2,3,4,6,7&8).
Now both A and B run the engine
without surging, then only difference is that I need to set the mixture a lot
leaner for A and richer for B with the OAT at 47*. I assume that is
normal, but don’t really know.
I think my next step is to start
tuning the EC2 again.
CHris
From: Rotary motors in
aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Ed Anderson
Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2009 7:40 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: EC-2 A and B differences
Could you provide more details, Chris. RPM where surging
occurs, manifold pressure, staging point, etc.
Most of the time if you have a surge it is caused by the engine
encountering a leaner region at higher rpm. This causes the engine to die
back until it hits a richer region, where it again picks up power and increases
rpm into the lean regions, repeat ad infinitum.
Here are some possible causes (assuming the A controller is really
OK):
1. The A controller may simply
have its MCT set too lean at some higher rpm. When you enter the surge
region, try enriching your mixture by turning your manual mixture knob to the
right. IF this improves or increase the rpm at which the surge occurs
then I would suspect a MCT table needs enriching.
2. If the A controller had a
restriction in its manifold connection/line then it may not see the increase in
manifold pressure (and thereby enrich the fuel mixture) soon enough to make the
adjustment and the engine runs lean.
3. One set of your injectors
(most likely the secondary) are not turning ON as they should. However,
with most engines with near equal size injectors in primary and secondary, the
engine should run up to 6000 + rpm on just one pair.
- Its possible you
have some sort of fuel restriction but the fact that it runs OK on the B
controller would seem to indicate that is not the problem in this case.
Here’s a couple of other things you might try
1.
Try setting your “A” controller’s MCT back to the
Default settings and see if that helps (check your manual on how to do this)
2.
Make sure the temperature probe for Controller A is not
accidentally getting grounded. The A controller will run without the temp
probe connected, but not certain what problem it may see if it is grounded.
Best to check to make certain.
Let us know how it goes
Ed
From: Rotary motors in
aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Chris and
Terria
Sent: Saturday, October 17, 2009 10:49 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] EC-2 A and B differences
I am still trying to get the engine to run smooth. It
has been surging on me. With fuel pressure steady, the mixture and the
RPM jump around a lot (I haven’t started taking exact readings yet, still
trying to reduce/eliminate surging).
Today I tried swapping around the vacuum lines, and as an
afterthought, I selected the B controller, and the engine smoother out, and RPM
jumped up considerably.
So I am wondering what the difference is between the
two. What are the extra things that A looks at that B
doesn’t? This will help me figure out a troubleshooting
procedure. Maybe I can isolate the faulty component.
I looked through the EC-2 manual and couldn’t find
anything listed. Maybe I missed it.
Chris
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