From: Rotary motors in
aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Steve Brooks
Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006
6:25 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Great Flight
Yesterday, the weather was
outstanding. A little cool at 56 degrees, but sunny and no wind. It was very
nice to drive only 15 minutes to the airport, to take the plane up for a flight
around the area.
On the flight bringing it up to NC 2
weeks ago, I thought that the engine was running a little rich, and after
trying option 9 to lean it up, it really didn’t change too much. Then,
in a moment of sheer brilliance, I decided to lean it a little more using mode
3. Still didn’t change the mixture much, but I was happy with it, so I
left it alone. When I throttled back upon arrival, the mixture bottomed out,
and the engine stumbled pretty bad. After a quick rotation of the mixture
control, and a couple clicks on option 9, it was running good again, until I
throttled back a little more, and started the cycle all over again.
A couple of days later, I went to the
airport and decided at this point, my best option was to return to factory
default, and start over, which I did. After tuning it for 10 minutes or so, I
figured it was good enough for a flight.
After preflight and taxi, my oil
temperature was at 140 degrees, but my coolant was still laying on the 100
degree peg. That is quite different than normal. I waited for a few minutes
until it started to move, just to make sure that it was working. When I took
off, I pushed the throttle forward, and the engine roared to life. It really
roared to life, because it was running at about 8 lbs of boost. I backed it
down a little to 5 lbs, and it backfired once, but then ran smoothly. After
climb out to about 2000 feet, the water and oil were only at 160 degrees, which
was really a surprise. It was a little cooler than normal, but the
temperatures were running about 20 degrees cooler.
I flew for about 20 minutes,
surveying my new flying area, and just enjoying the view. I then decided to
check out the tuning and started lowering the power. I found several points
where the mixture was really lean, and I made adjustments (option 9 only) to
get it where it needed to be. I think that it probably tuned better now, than
it ever has been, so I’m not going to mess with it anymore.
Temperatures never did get above 160
degrees, which makes me wonder if I had an air bubble in the cooling system
that worked out during, or after the long flight 2 weeks ago. Whatever it is,
I like it. I slowed up to 100 kits approaching the downwind, and made a
perfect approach and landing. After the decent and landing, temperatures were
at about 140 degrees, and the engine was running very good.
It’s very nice to can add fuel
and fly, but I think that before my next flight, I’ll pull the top
cowling, and just give everything a once over, to make sure that everything is
still good. I’ll also re-torque the prop.
Steve Brooks
Cozy MKIV N75CZ
Turbo Rotary – 48 hours and
counting.