Ralf,
According to what I have been told, by some folks at Continental,
you do not need to worry about harming the electric fuel by using it as needed.
You could have left the high boost pump on from the time the CHT started the
increase above the others until you reached your cruise altitude. So, yes it is
reasonable to use your high boost pump for cooling. Your engine will not flood
and it will be happy that you are keeping it cool!
I told you I have used the high boost pump more than once to
keep the CHT from getting higher than I wanted. If I need it I use it.
You might want to increase the engine driven fuel pump output
just a little more, to 44 GPH.
Since you said the CHTs stay in the area you like when you keep
the RMP at “full” (2700?) you might want to do the entire climb at
2700. Again, according to the folks I talked to at Continental operating at
2700 RPM during the entire climb will not hurt your engine.
As the people at GAMI say, “it is not how HARD you run
your engine, it is how you run your engine HARD”. Just keeping the CHTs
cool is going to go a long way toward making you and the engine happy. Using
the high boost pump and/or operating at 2700 RPM, as needed, will do that.
So, be not of faint heart.
Lynn
From: Lancair Mailing
List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of bronnenmeier@GROBSYSTEMS.COM
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 9:59 AM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: [LML] boost pump for engine cooling 4P
Dear subscribers,
A while back I reported a warmer cylinder 4 during climb at
32 MAP and 2500 rpm. Lynn recommended I could test high boost during climb and
see if it makes a difference.
In the mean time I cranked up my fuel pump by approx. 1 GPH.
At take-off I see now 42.5 GPH at 38.4 MAP 2680 rpm (on a TSIO550 B which is
rated for 38 MAP at 41…43GPH according to my manual).
In climb under full rpm/MAP engine stays very nice and cool.
Climb 2500 rpm with 32MAP: all EGTs show the same, after
increasing the fuel flow all CHTs stay generally a bit cooler but CHT 4 is
still the one that runs a little warmer. During climb when CHT4 approached 380
I turned the high boost on – the CHT went down by approx. 10 degrees back
into the 360’s. During the climb to 18000 I had the boost pump on 3 times
for may be 2 min each time. The Fuel flow increased from 30.5 to 33 GPH. I
climbed with +-170 kts at 1000 fpm. This is new: usually I was never able
to get the CHT down in climb unless I decreased the climb rate.
Question: is it a reasonable practice to use the high boost
for engine cooling? How long can it run in high boost without getting damaged?
Craig reported earlier that he had his fuel pump modified to
feed more fuel under partial power – this sounds complicated and
expensive and if I don’t have to I would rather not go there.
Thanks
for you input
Ralf