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		philperry9
 
 
  Joined: 23 Nov 2011 Posts: 381
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 5:16 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				I am about 19.5 hours into Phase 1 and am still learning all the little nuances of the engine.   For the first few hours I kept the mixture and power pushed close to the firewall for break-in.   Recently, now that the engine looks like the new has worn off, I have started to lean the engine more and more aggressively.  
 
 Mine might be behaving like others, but I'd like to confirm it or talk through some possibilities.
 Yesterday I was at 5,500 msl (roughly 7,000 DA), activated the leaning function on my G3X, and started leaning.   Power: 24 In / 2500 RPM.    As I began to approach peak EGT, the engine started to cough a bit.   That was in the neighborhood of 12.5 GPH.
 I hadn't reached peak yet, so I continued with the leaning just to see.   I was able to get the first cylinder to peak at 11.9ish and once I found peak for that cylinder I richened it back up to 75º ROP.   The engine smoothed right out and was happy.  That was around 14 GPH.
 Is this a behavior that you see in your engine, or have I missed something along the way?
 - The engine is an Aersport IO-540-D4A5 and pistons are 9:1.
 - The Ignition is Light Speed on one side and a Slick (Impluse) on the other.   The slick is timed at 20º per Aerosport's engraving on the data plate.
 - Fuel/Induction is from Airflow Performance.
 I'm just curious to know if your engine exhibits the same behavior of running rough before it reaches peak.   I'm not attempting to run it LOP because the injectors haven't been balanced yet, but I really don't see how it would be possible to run LOP smoothly when there's even less fuel entering the nozzle.
 Sometimes too much data out of the EMS leads to re-learning a lot of things.   In the past, I didn't have this much EGT/FF information and would just lean until it got rough and then twist the mixture in a few times.   My assumption always was that the mixture was on the LOP side when the roughness started.  In this case, with all this fancy equipment, I can see the roughness starts on the ROP side.
 Anyway, I'm just curious if this behavior is normal and something I shouldn't worry about or if there's something really going on that I need to stop and investigate.
 
 Phil
 
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		civengpe
 
 
  Joined: 14 Feb 2011 Posts: 105
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 5:29 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				Phil,
 You need to balance your injectors. You have the exact same engine as I do and it took about three iterations with Don at airflow performance to get mine dialed into where I am today. Give him a call and he will send you a lean test sheet. Send it to him and he will send you a new set of injector nozzles. Replace the existing ones with the ones he sends you, then repeat the test. 
 After a couple of tries you will be able to fly LOP just fine. 
 Shannon
 
 On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 8:19 AM Phillip Perry <philperry9(at)gmail.com (philperry9(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  I am about 19.5 hours into Phase 1 and am still learning all the little nuances of the engine.   For the first few hours I kept the mixture and power pushed close to the firewall for break-in.   Recently, now that the engine looks like the new has worn off, I have started to lean the engine more and more aggressively.  
 
 Mine might be behaving like others, but I'd like to confirm it or talk through some possibilities.
 Yesterday I was at 5,500 msl (roughly 7,000 DA), activated the leaning function on my G3X, and started leaning.   Power: 24 In / 2500 RPM.    As I began to approach peak EGT, the engine started to cough a bit.   That was in the neighborhood of 12.5 GPH.
 I hadn't reached peak yet, so I continued with the leaning just to see.   I was able to get the first cylinder to peak at 11.9ish and once I found peak for that cylinder I richened it back up to 75º ROP.   The engine smoothed right out and was happy.  That was around 14 GPH.
 Is this a behavior that you see in your engine, or have I missed something along the way?
 - The engine is an Aersport IO-540-D4A5 and pistons are 9:1.
 - The Ignition is Light Speed on one side and a Slick (Impluse) on the other.   The slick is timed at 20º per Aerosport's engraving on the data plate.
 - Fuel/Induction is from Airflow Performance.
 I'm just curious to know if your engine exhibits the same behavior of running rough before it reaches peak.   I'm not attempting to run it LOP because the injectors haven't been balanced yet, but I really don't see how it would be possible to run LOP smoothly when there's even less fuel entering the nozzle.
 Sometimes too much data out of the EMS leads to re-learning a lot of things.   In the past, I didn't have this much EGT/FF information and would just lean until it got rough and then twist the mixture in a few times.   My assumption always was that the mixture was on the LOP side when the roughness started.  In this case, with all this fancy equipment, I can see the roughness starts on the ROP side.
 Anyway, I'm just curious if this behavior is normal and something I shouldn't worry about or if there's something really going on that I need to stop and investigate.
 
 Phil
 
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		Tim Olson
 
 
  Joined: 25 Jan 2007 Posts: 2882
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 5:45 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				Hi Phil,
 
 It probably is a factor in injector balance.  I can basically lean from 
 full rich
 all the way to 75 LOP or more and it doesn't stumble.  So my guess is
 that  you will find the injectors need a bit of balancing. Personally I'd
 wait until you get 25 hours on it before backing off on the hard running,
 and then get it up to 9500 msl where you are well into the range where
 you can't exceed any high power setting going LOP and then do a very very
 slow full mixture pull all the way to 50 LOP.  Do this 3 or 4 times,
 and upload it all to Savvy or use some software to look at the peak curves.
 You'll see if they match up or not.   And then get right to balancing
 the injectors.   People procrastinate...I know I do, and wait far too 
 long to
 balance the injectors on their engines.  Why suffer rough running longer
 than normal?     On my RV-14 I haven't yet done a balance, but, that's
 because after running the test early on, it was so close I wasn't sure if
 I could even improve it.  I'm going to have to go back now and see if it's
 changed at all.  I am happy it's pretty good right out of the box, and I've
 been flying it LOP a bunch.  Stumbling is just something you shouldn't 
 experience
 if everything is set up right on an IO engine.
 
 If I am cruising LOP and I richen it up, all I get is a little 
 acceleration, and a little
 more "thump" to the power stroke as the cylinder pressures get higher.
 Other than that it's just smooth.
 
 You're definitely right about the "too much data".  People fixate on 
 numbers when
 using digital data, but in this particular case, you'll want that data.  
 Hopefully
 you can capture it at 1 second resolution, and if so, you'll be able to 
 tune it in
 very quickly.
 
 Oh, and when you do the LOP, one benefit of being high (not Colorado 
 high), is
 that you can do it at WOT.  Your doing it at 24" and 2500rpm is higher than
 I would do it it at.  That's above 75% power I believe, no?  (This is 
 off the
 cuff so 'scuse me if I'm wrong on that)  Anyway, do the test at an altitude
 where you can get 21-22" and 2360rpm and see how that goes.
 I really don't fly LOP under 7500msl unless I power back, and I prefer not
 to power back.  
 Tim
 
 
 On 7/20/2017 8:15 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   I am about 19.5 hours into Phase 1 and am still learning all the 
  little nuances of the engine.   For the first few hours I kept the 
  mixture and power pushed close to the firewall for break-in.   
  Recently, now that the engine looks like the new has worn off, I have 
  started to lean the engine more and more aggressively.
 
  Mine might be behaving like others, but I'd like to confirm it or talk 
  through some possibilities.
 
  Yesterday I was at 5,500 msl (roughly 7,000 DA), activated the leaning 
  function on my G3X, and started leaning.   Power: 24 In / 2500 RPM.   
   As I began to approach peak EGT, the engine started to cough a bit.   
  That was in the neighborhood of 12.5 GPH.
 
  I hadn't reached peak yet, so I continued with the leaning just to 
  see.   I was able to get the first cylinder to peak at 11.9ish and 
  once I found peak for that cylinder I richened it back up to 75º ROP. 
    The engine smoothed right out and was happy.  That was around 14 GPH.
 
  Is this a behavior that you see in your engine, or have I missed 
  something along the way?
 
  - The engine is an Aersport IO-540-D4A5 and pistons are 9:1.
  - The Ignition is Light Speed on one side and a Slick (Impluse) on the 
  other.   The slick is timed at 20º per Aerosport's engraving on the 
  data plate.
  - Fuel/Induction is from Airflow Performance.
 
  I'm just curious to know if your engine exhibits the same behavior of 
  running rough before it reaches peak.   I'm not attempting to run it 
  LOP because the injectors haven't been balanced yet, but I really 
  don't see how it would be possible to run LOP smoothly when there's 
  even less fuel entering the nozzle.
 
  Sometimes too much data out of the EMS leads to re-learning a lot of 
  things.   In the past, I didn't have this much EGT/FF information and 
  would just lean until it got rough and then twist the mixture in a few 
  times.   My assumption always was that the mixture was on the LOP side 
  when the roughness started.  In this case, with all this fancy 
  equipment, I can see the roughness starts on the ROP side.
 
  Anyway, I'm just curious if this behavior is normal and something I 
  shouldn't worry about or if there's something really going on that I 
  need to stop and investigate.
 
  Phil
 
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		Kellym
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1706 Location: Sun Lakes AZ
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 5:52 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				I don't think it is particularly normal. You should not be getting more 
 than a hint of roughness as you approach peak.  I would not do your 
 testing at the power setting you had. Reduce to 65% power first, until 
 you determine where the roughness is coming from. You won't hurt 
 anything at 65%, while you can cause problems leaning slowly while at or 
 above 75%. Also, for your power setting, 11.9 is too lean for first cyl 
 to peak. Either you don't have FF calibrated yet, or your power is 
 dropping significantly while you are leaning. Once you have injectors 
 balanced and any ignition issues dealt with, you can then just lean 
 directly to a FF value LOP and know what power you are getting and that 
 you are at a setting that treats the engine well.
 I have two Bendix S-1200 mags, with stock Bendix RSA fuel injection, and 
 stock 8.5:1 compression. While I will feel a hint of vibration as I go 
 LOP, the engine doesn't get rough until leaner than 50 LOP. The 
 vibration is significantly less than 1 fouled plug would cause, more a 
 feeling than hearing anything. I have not balanced injectors yet.
 I use the formula of 14.9 times your fuel flow while LOP equals power. 
 For 195 hp, (75%) that is  13.0 gph. For 70% it is 12. For 65% it is 
 11.3, for 60% 10.5 and so on. That is with the LOP definition of degrees 
 lean from the LAST cyl to peak. For your higher compression you might 
 need to bump the calculation factor to 15.0
 At your starting power, you were near 75%, and I would guess your power 
 dropped off around 10% as you approached peak on first cylinder.
 Have you run either GAMI test or AFP leaning test?
 Another measure of mixture distribution is to glance at your EGTs 
 shortly after lift-off, full power. Ideally they all will be at or 1300 
 or less, preferably centered on 1250, plus or minus 50. That will have 
 you approximately 200 ROP, where you want during full power operations.
 You can also check your ignition at cruise altitude by setting the 
 mixture you want, then doing a routine mag check....with the caveat that 
 if engine quits for any reason, you go to near lean cutoff before 
 turning mag back on...that is to protect your mufflers, and to prevent a 
 prop surge.
 
 On 7/20/2017 6:15 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   I am about 19.5 hours into Phase 1 and am still learning all the little 
  nuances of the engine.   For the first few hours I kept the mixture and 
  power pushed close to the firewall for break-in.   Recently, now that 
  the engine looks like the new has worn off, I have started to lean the 
  engine more and more aggressively.
  
  Mine might be behaving like others, but I'd like to confirm it or talk 
  through some possibilities.
  
  Yesterday I was at 5,500 msl (roughly 7,000 DA), activated the leaning 
  function on my G3X, and started leaning.   Power: 24 In / 2500 RPM.   
    As I began to approach peak EGT, the engine started to cough a bit.   
  That was in the neighborhood of 12.5 GPH.
  
  I hadn't reached peak yet, so I continued with the leaning just to see. 
     I was able to get the first cylinder to peak at 11.9ish and once I 
  found peak for that cylinder I richened it back up to 75º ROP.   The 
  engine smoothed right out and was happy.  That was around 14 GPH.
  
  Is this a behavior that you see in your engine, or have I missed 
  something along the way?
  
  - The engine is an Aersport IO-540-D4A5 and pistons are 9:1.
  - The Ignition is Light Speed on one side and a Slick (Impluse) on the 
  other.   The slick is timed at 20º per Aerosport's engraving on the data 
  plate.
  - Fuel/Induction is from Airflow Performance.
  
  I'm just curious to know if your engine exhibits the same behavior of 
  running rough before it reaches peak.   I'm not attempting to run it LOP 
  because the injectors haven't been balanced yet, but I really don't see 
  how it would be possible to run LOP smoothly when there's even less fuel 
  entering the nozzle.
  
  Sometimes too much data out of the EMS leads to re-learning a lot of 
  things.   In the past, I didn't have this much EGT/FF information and 
  would just lean until it got rough and then twist the mixture in a few 
  times.   My assumption always was that the mixture was on the LOP side 
  when the roughness started.  In this case, with all this fancy 
  equipment, I can see the roughness starts on the ROP side.
  
  Anyway, I'm just curious if this behavior is normal and something I 
  shouldn't worry about or if there's something really going on that I 
  need to stop and investigate.
  
  Phil
  
  
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  _________________ Kelly McMullen
 
A&P/IA, EAA Tech Counselor # 5286
 
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		philperry9
 
 
  Joined: 23 Nov 2011 Posts: 381
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 6:08 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				A little more data...  
 
 Since my engine has 9:1 pistons, Aerosport power suggested that it 285 was closer to the baseline for calculating percentage of HP.  So, using that math in the G3X setup, it was about 68% of power.  I can't say the FF is 100% correct yet, but it's close.   I've been making a number of power changes in my flights and haven't had a chance to get a constant enough run to feel like it's calibrated.  But it's always been fairly close.
 Good info so far..  Thanks for the continued discussion.
 Phil
 
 
 On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 8:52 AM, Kelly McMullen <kellym(at)aviating.com (kellym(at)aviating.com)> wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  --> RV10-List message posted by: Kelly McMullen <kellym(at)aviating.com (kellym(at)aviating.com)>
  
  I don't think it is particularly normal. You should not be getting more than a hint of roughness as you approach peak.  I would not do your testing at the power setting you had. Reduce to 65% power first, until you determine where the roughness is coming from. You won't hurt anything at 65%, while you can cause problems leaning slowly while at or above 75%. Also, for your power setting, 11.9 is too lean for first cyl to peak. Either you don't have FF calibrated yet, or your power is dropping significantly while you are leaning. Once you have injectors balanced and any ignition issues dealt with, you can then just lean directly to a FF value LOP and know what power you are getting and that you are at a setting that treats the engine well.
  I have two Bendix S-1200 mags, with stock Bendix RSA fuel injection, and stock 8.5:1 compression. While I will feel a hint of vibration as I go LOP, the engine doesn't get rough until leaner than 50 LOP. The vibration is significantly less than 1 fouled plug would cause, more a feeling than hearing anything. I have not balanced injectors yet.
  I use the formula of 14.9 times your fuel flow while LOP equals power. For 195 hp, (75%) that is  13.0 gph. For 70% it is 12. For 65% it is 11.3, for 60% 10.5 and so on. That is with the LOP definition of degrees lean from the LAST cyl to peak. For your higher compression you might need to bump the calculation factor to 15.0
  At your starting power, you were near 75%, and I would guess your power dropped off around 10% as you approached peak on first cylinder.
  Have you run either GAMI test or AFP leaning test?
  Another measure of mixture distribution is to glance at your EGTs shortly after lift-off, full power. Ideally they all will be at or 1300 or less, preferably centered on 1250, plus or minus 50. That will have you approximately 200 ROP, where you want during full power operations.
  You can also check your ignition at cruise altitude by setting the mixture you want, then doing a routine mag check....with the caveat that if engine quits for any reason, you go to near lean cutoff before turning mag back on..that is to protect your mufflers, and to prevent a prop surge.
  
  On 7/20/2017 6:15 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
   	  | Quote: | 	 		   I am about 19.5 hours into Phase 1 and am still learning all the little nuances of the engine.   For the first few hours I kept the mixture and power pushed close to the firewall for break-in.   Recently, now that the engine looks like the new has worn off, I have started to lean the engine more and more aggressively.
  
  Mine might be behaving like others, but I'd like to confirm it or talk through some possibilities.
  
  Yesterday I was at 5,500 msl (roughly 7,000 DA), activated the leaning function on my G3X, and started leaning.   Power: 24 In / 2500 RPM.     As I began to approach peak EGT, the engine started to cough a bit.   That was in the neighborhood of 12.5 GPH.
  
  I hadn't reached peak yet, so I continued with the leaning just to see.    I was able to get the first cylinder to peak at 11.9ish and once I found peak for that cylinder I richened it back up to 75º ROP.   The engine smoothed right out and was happy.  That was around 14 GPH.
  
  Is this a behavior that you see in your engine, or have I missed something along the way?
  
  - The engine is an Aersport IO-540-D4A5 and pistons are 9:1.
  - The Ignition is Light Speed on one side and a Slick (Impluse) on the other.   The slick is timed at 20º per Aerosport's engraving on the data plate.
  - Fuel/Induction is from Airflow Performance.
  
  I'm just curious to know if your engine exhibits the same behavior of running rough before it reaches peak.   I'm not attempting to run it LOP because the injectors haven't been balanced yet, but I really don't see how it would be possible to run LOP smoothly when there's even less fuel entering the nozzle.
  
  Sometimes too much data out of the EMS leads to re-learning a lot of things.   In the past, I didn't have this much EGT/FF information and would just lean until it got rough and then twist the mixture in a few times.   My assumption always was that the mixture was on the LOP side when the roughness started.  In this case, with all this fancy equipment, I can see the roughness starts on the ROP side.
  
  Anyway, I'm just curious if this behavior is normal and something I shouldn't worry about or if there's something really going on that I need to stop and investigate.
  
  Phil
  
  
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		Kellym
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1706 Location: Sun Lakes AZ
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 6:27 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				I suggest you not use whatever power the engine made on the dyno, but 
 rather 260 hp for calculating performance. My reasoning is that you then 
 can get consistent numbers with other users. Using the stock numbers 
 with higher compression should get you better fuel economy.
 Also, higher compression pistons generate more heat, the cylinders tend 
 to run hotter, which accelerates wear. A more extreme example...I know 
 of an aircraft that had an STC to run 10:1 pistons in a 200 hp IO-360. 
 It might have had a MP restriction around 28" so that the engine didn't 
 make more power than the airframe was certified for. However the 
 aircraft did not have a full engine monitor, only single pt EGT,CHT and 
 oil temp. Before 1000 hours the engine had self-destructed at least one 
 piston, on takeoff from MSN for OSH. A terrible way to not make OSH. A 
 lot of engines that had that STC did not make more than 800 hours before 
 needing top overhauls.
 It is nice to have the power when you need it, or to run say something 
 over 170 hp to higher altitudes, but I would not make a practice of 
 running it over 195 hp in cruise, especially rich of peak. I wouldn't 
 climb it at over 260 hp unless you had an obstacle clearance issue. 
 These engines have very good longevity at the 250-260 hp they were 
 originally rated, durability at higher power is not well documented. 
 Lycoming made significant changes to the engine to run at 300 hp, such 
 as oil nozzles spraying on the bottom of pistons, better breathing and 
 cooling fins, bigger heads, etc.
 
 On 7/20/2017 7:08 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   A little more data...
  
  Since my engine has 9:1 pistons, Aerosport power suggested that it 285 
  was closer to the baseline for calculating percentage of HP.  So, using 
  that math in the G3X setup, it was about 68% of power.  I can't say the 
  FF is 100% correct yet, but it's close.   I've been making a number of 
  power changes in my flights and haven't had a chance to get a constant 
  enough run to feel like it's calibrated.  But it's always been fairly close.
  
  Good info so far..  Thanks for the continued discussion.
  
  Phil
  
  
  On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 8:52 AM, Kelly McMullen <kellym(at)aviating.com 
  <mailto:kellym(at)aviating.com>> wrote:
  
      
      <mailto:kellym(at)aviating.com>>
  
      I don't think it is particularly normal. You should not be getting
      more than a hint of roughness as you approach peak.  I would not do
      your testing at the power setting you had. Reduce to 65% power
      first, until you determine where the roughness is coming from. You
      won't hurt anything at 65%, while you can cause problems leaning
      slowly while at or above 75%. Also, for your power setting, 11.9 is
      too lean for first cyl to peak. Either you don't have FF calibrated
      yet, or your power is dropping significantly while you are leaning.
      Once you have injectors balanced and any ignition issues dealt with,
      you can then just lean directly to a FF value LOP and know what
      power you are getting and that you are at a setting that treats the
      engine well.
      I have two Bendix S-1200 mags, with stock Bendix RSA fuel injection,
      and stock 8.5:1 compression. While I will feel a hint of vibration
      as I go LOP, the engine doesn't get rough until leaner than 50 LOP.
      The vibration is significantly less than 1 fouled plug would cause,
      more a feeling than hearing anything. I have not balanced injectors yet.
      I use the formula of 14.9 times your fuel flow while LOP equals
      power. For 195 hp, (75%) that is  13.0 gph. For 70% it is 12. For
      65% it is 11.3, for 60% 10.5 and so on. That is with the LOP
      definition of degrees lean from the LAST cyl to peak. For your
      higher compression you might need to bump the calculation factor to 15.0
      At your starting power, you were near 75%, and I would guess your
      power dropped off around 10% as you approached peak on first cylinder.
      Have you run either GAMI test or AFP leaning test?
      Another measure of mixture distribution is to glance at your EGTs
      shortly after lift-off, full power. Ideally they all will be at or
      1300 or less, preferably centered on 1250, plus or minus 50. That
      will have you approximately 200 ROP, where you want during full
      power operations.
      You can also check your ignition at cruise altitude by setting the
      mixture you want, then doing a routine mag check....with the caveat
      that if engine quits for any reason, you go to near lean cutoff
      before turning mag back on...that is to protect your mufflers, and
      to prevent a prop surge.
  
  
      On 7/20/2017 6:15 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
  
          I am about 19.5 hours into Phase 1 and am still learning all the
          little nuances of the engine.   For the first few hours I kept
          the mixture and power pushed close to the firewall for
          break-in.   Recently, now that the engine looks like the new has
          worn off, I have started to lean the engine more and more
          aggressively.
  
          Mine might be behaving like others, but I'd like to confirm it
          or talk through some possibilities.
  
          Yesterday I was at 5,500 msl (roughly 7,000 DA), activated the
          leaning function on my G3X, and started leaning.   Power: 24 In
          / 2500 RPM.     As I began to approach peak EGT, the engine
          started to cough a bit.   That was in the neighborhood of 12.5 GPH.
  
          I hadn't reached peak yet, so I continued with the leaning just
          to see.    I was able to get the first cylinder to peak at
          11.9ish and once I found peak for that cylinder I richened it
          back up to 75º ROP.   The engine smoothed right out and was
          happy.  That was around 14 GPH.
  
          Is this a behavior that you see in your engine, or have I missed
          something along the way?
  
          - The engine is an Aersport IO-540-D4A5 and pistons are 9:1.
          - The Ignition is Light Speed on one side and a Slick (Impluse)
          on the other.   The slick is timed at 20º per Aerosport's
          engraving on the data plate.
          - Fuel/Induction is from Airflow Performance.
  
          I'm just curious to know if your engine exhibits the same
          behavior of running rough before it reaches peak.   I'm not
          attempting to run it LOP because the injectors haven't been
          balanced yet, but I really don't see how it would be possible to
          run LOP smoothly when there's even less fuel entering the nozzle.
  
          Sometimes too much data out of the EMS leads to re-learning a
          lot of things.   In the past, I didn't have this much EGT/FF
          information and would just lean until it got rough and then
          twist the mixture in a few times.   My assumption always was
          that the mixture was on the LOP side when the roughness
          started.  In this case, with all this fancy equipment, I can see
          the roughness starts on the ROP side.
  
          Anyway, I'm just curious if this behavior is normal and
          something I shouldn't worry about or if there's something really
          going on that I need to stop and investigate.
  
          Phil
  
  
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		philperry9
 
 
  Joined: 23 Nov 2011 Posts: 381
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 6:34 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				Good points...   I can adjust it down and use that as the reference...   
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   On Jul 20, 2017, at 9:27 AM, Kelly McMullen <kellym(at)aviating.com> wrote:
  
  G3X
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		Bob Turner
 
 
  Joined: 03 Jan 2009 Posts: 885 Location: Castro Valley, CA
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 9:27 am    Post subject: Re: Leaning and Learning | 
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				Do you really have a Slick mag with impulse coupling? I'm a little hazy on the details, but Lycoming stopped shipping them that way, and put in retard mags with Slick start instead. I think there's a repetitive A/D on the impulse coupling in this engine?
 And, as someone with a relatively new engine, I assume you've heard about the wide-reaching "mandatory SB" on the connecting rod journals?
 But this is all independent of balancing your injectors. It's easy and relatively inexpensive. After balancing, I can slowly back the mixture way out, and the engine continues to run smoothly - just makes less and less power as I go further and further lean of peak. Running LOP gives reasonable range with the standard 60 gallon tanks. (160 KTAS on 10 gal/hr).
 
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		Mauledriver(at)nc.rr.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 10:49 am    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				Phil, I've been running LOP for 900 hours and 6 years now. Everything 
 I'd have to offer is captured in Tim's post - every single word.
 
 After you have it all set up and get comfortable (I don't need no 
 stinking gauges, I just move the mixture next to about there), you'll 
 even be able to lean in the climb up to 8-11k where the '10 really 
 becomes a sweet traveling machine.  But leaning in the climb in not LOP, 
 it's just maintaining a reasonable ROP setting.
 
 Bill "LOP is great but you have to go thru a couple of tuning cycles 
 first" Watson
 
 ---
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		Kelly McMullen
 
 
  Joined: 16 Apr 2008 Posts: 1188 Location: Sun Lakes AZ
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 1:03 pm    Post subject: Leaning and Learning | 
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				Lycoming will ship with most any Slick mag you want. The problem with
 impulse couplings dates back awhile..current ones I don't believe have
 the AD..different attach method. Some vintage Bendix also had impulse
 coupler problems, IIRC. None of them come with Slick Start, AFAIK. You
 have to add that to retard breaker mags.
 -sent from the I-droid implanted in my forearm
 On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 10:27 AM, Bob Turner <bobturner(at)alum.rpi.edu> wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   
 
  Do you really have a Slick mag with impulse coupling? I'm a little hazy on the details, but Lycoming stopped shipping them that way, and put in retard mags with Slick start instead. I think there's a repetitive A/D on the impulse coupling in this engine?
  And, as someone with a relatively new engine, I assume you've heard about the wide-reaching "mandatory SB" on the connecting rod journals?
  But this is all independent of balancing your injectors. It's easy and relatively inexpensive. After balancing, I can slowly back the mixture way out, and the engine continues to run smoothly - just makes less and less power as I go further and further lean of peak. Running LOP gives reasonable range with the standard 60 gallon tanks. (160 KTAS on 10 gal/hr).
 
  --------
  Bob Turner
  RV-10 QB
 
 
  Read this topic online here:
 
  http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=471203#471203
 
 
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