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Posted for "Frederick Moreno" <fredmoreno@optusnet.com.au>:
George:
I believe you. We were definitely detonation challenged!
I can only report what we recorded and I subsequently committed to
memory, my note book being long gone. There may be a brain fade
problem, not unlikely given my advancing age. :-(
It was clear that about 30 gph (or whatever we were working toward) was
not enough. The engine was a Lycoming, not a Continental, but I'm not
sure that makes a hill of beans difference. I leave it to others to
comment.
I would ask Brent to chime in if he remembers differently, particularly
details of temperature, manifold pressure, and compression ratio.
Forgetful Fred?
-----Original Message-----
From: George Braly [mailto:gwbraly@gami.com]
Sent: Tuesday, 25 April 2006 7:49 AM
Subject: RE: [LML] Compression, boost, and detonation
Fred,
That is a fascinating description of that flight.
Based on having run a similar engine with 8.5:1 (TSIO-550) on a test
stand with internal cylinder pressure transducers, I would predict that
it would be difficult to avoid detonation under your flight conditions
and at 320 Hp at any fuel flow less than about 0.66 to 0.68 BSFC. That
is about 35 to 37 gph.
...snip...
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