|
>> ... said that
those fellows running full-out at 250 mph TAS or more on the 1.5 hr race to
Oshkosh at 2000' have 2" MAP boost and are running at or above 100% power
the whole way! To his knowledge none of those racing who have LSE EI have had a
problem with detonation or pre-ignition.<<
Well, if that is the pass-fail criteria - - then
I continue to respectfully disagree.
Those are not necessarily the most adverse
conditions.
I would prefer to see the numbers - - the
data.
Regards, George
I spoke with Klaus of LSE about this plug thingy, and he
said he did research on this with instrumented plugs around 1989 which
resulted in recommending Automotive plugs with the right heatrange in place of
the Aircraft plugs he recommended up to then. He specifically protested the
use of the Champion 386 plugs sold by another vendor in an article in
Sport Aviation about that time. He says that a plug in the proper heat range
will have two shades of tan on the insulator with the darker side near the
electrode. if it is no change, the heat range is too hot or too cold. Cracked
insulators on a plug is a sign of detonation not temperature. He reminded me
that those planes racing at Reno with LSE ignition and recommended automotive
plugs have never had a cylinder go bad, but several planes with aircraft plugs
and Magnetos have. He also said that those fellows running full-out at 250 mph
TAS or more on the 1.5 hr race to Oshkosh at 2000' have 2" MAP
boost and are running at or above 100% power the whole way! To his knowledge
none of those racing who have LSE EI have had a problem with detonation or
pre-ignition. However, there is always a way to over- advance the timing,
regardless of the ignition device
used.
|