|
This is a common misunderstanding about Speed / Density EFI systems. A vacuum leak in a system of this type will not cause any problem other than an idle speed which can't be adjusted far enough down. Besides, at full throttle, there IS no vacuum.
Tracy
On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 11:12 AM, Bill Bradburry <bbradburry@bellsouth.net> wrote:
Hi Mark,
You can check for vacuum leaks by
squirting starting fluid or carb cleaner around the intake system while someone
is holding the brakes.
What is the airspeed when you hit the
wall? You say the speed will gradually start to bleed off. Do you
mean that the speed initially increases by some value, then falls back? How
much? Does the engine rpm maintain during this phase? Are you at
WOT and just using the prop to control the engine speed at this time?
Bill B
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Mark Steitle
Sent: Monday, November 15, 2010
9:09 AM
To: Rotary
motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Hey are
those 304 Stainless staples...(from David)
OK, Doug, I'll post my weekend update.
As some of you may know, I have had troubles getting my 20B to run as
it should. Problems started about 3 years back when I decided to convert
from the stock CAS to the Renesis style CAS. While I did have limited
success, it was very sensitive to alignment and air gap of the CAS sensor, and
possibly some other issues that I am not smart enough to figure out. I
had trouble getting it to run above 5800 rpm.
About a month ago I decided that enough was enough and I called Tracy to say that I
wanted my EC-2 converted back to the original configuration. I sent
it back to Tracy who made the mod and upgraded the software to the latest
version. I got it back on Friday and was anxious to see how it would
perform. I installed the upgraded EC-2 on Saturday. Yea,
it started on the third prop blade and ran quite well, although the Mixture
knob was not at "12 O'clock", it ran very smooth.
Following the instructions in the manual, first thing I did was
to adjust Mode 3 to compensate for my larger 60#
injectors. Now it was running really well in the upper rpm/map
ranges. A little adjusting of the lower addresses using Mode
1 & 9 and it was idling down around 1500 rpm. (Keep in
mind that this is a p-port motor.) The exhaust tone at low idle
is hard to describe...it is enough to send chills up your leg.
;-0
Sunday, after a some more tuning, I got it to where it
would almost do 7000 rpm static. (Keep in mind
that Lockhart, TX is a small country town and this was Sunday
morning. You could probably hear me tuning my engine all over
town.) Confident that it would stay running, I decided it was time to
fly. It climbed out at 6700 rpm as smooth as could
be. There was a 5000' ceiling, so I couldn't climb too high, but the
air was silky smooth. I flew a couple of patterns, climbing as I
circled. At 3500 msl I headed east and did some tuning with Mode 9 at
different MAP settings. Up and down the scale, fine-tuning each
address. She was running like a fine Swiss watch, or to put it another
way, like a rotary should.
1) MAP Readings - It appears that I may have a vacuum leak as
the MAP at idle is reading 17.4". Next trip to the airport I
will double-check to make sure that I got both lines plugged into the EC-2
properly, and check for leaks elsewhere. It is amazing that
it idles as well as it does under these circumstances. Note
that rather than using a throttle body, I am using a slide-throttle which
is located just a few inches from the intake ports. So, the
vacuum lines are plugged into the unused oil injection ports in the rotor
housings (no oil injection pump). Could this account for
the unusual MAP readings? I do have a plenum, but since it is
open to the atmosphere, I can't measure MAP from there. I think
there are others that use this scheme with success.
2) Performance - I seem to hit a speed wall at around 2000-2100
prop rpm. I can set the prop higher and get
a higher engine rpm, but the higher rpm doesn't translate into higher
speeds. The speed will gradually start bleeding off. Not
sure why this is happening. Could be tuning, or intake/exhaust design,
or just a characteristic of the M/T prop. Or, maybe the engine
isn't making enough horsepower to push the airframe through the air any
faster. It is annoying though, knowing that you have another 1500 rpm on
tap but can't use it.
3) Alternator - the voltage reading on main alternator is
low. This is a new alternator which has been converted to external
regulator. I'll try adjusting the regulator (again).
All in all, a very successful weekend. As usual, more issues
to sort out though.
Lancair ES, N/A P-port 20B
On Sun, Nov 14, 2010 at 11:20 PM, <hoursaway1@comcast.net> wrote:
Rodger
that Doug, I just went through all the paperwork again to make sure all ducks
in a row, then shot one of the ducks & had dinner, a sweet red wine
marinade is the secret to good tender duck you know. David.
----- Original Message -----
From: DLOMHEIM@aol.com
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft"
<flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Sunday, November 14, 2010 7:09:45 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Hey are those 304 Stainless staples...(from David)
Na...gotta be 321...don't you think
David?! I'm still hoping to read about some flying exploits
from this weekend, from someone on the list! Surely all our aviators
weren't just sitting around watching football all day like us gimpy / DNIF
guys!!!! :)
Mucho congrats on getting your project to
the point of final inspection prior to first flight! Take your time, be
safe, and enjoy the moment! Then post some pictures / data of
the big event on the list! :)
|
|