There's a title that might catch your attention.
Over the past 20+ years, on two RV-7s equipped with an IO-360-A1B6 (200HP, Angle Valve, Roller Lifters, Piston Squirters, Dual EI, 20°BTDC base timing), one parts built (Aerosport Power - Bart Lalonde) and the lycoming factory, I've consistently experienced a "cold" #4 CHT -- some 20 - 30°F colder than the rest of the cylinders.
On a lark, I visited a friend of mine with a Mooney 201 (aka, M20J, 205SE, MSE) equipped with nearly the same engine as my RV-7; an IO-360-A3B6. I noticed something unique about the baffling (picture)
View attachment IMG_0658.jpeg
Mooney puts a piece of baffle plate on the top rear of the #4 cylinder, just in front of and below the inlet to the Oil cooler. My friend never sees odd CHT spreads.
What the heck, time to do some metal bending -- I fabricated a piece of .032" to cover the same portion of the #4 cylinder, with a different attachment mechanism.
View attachment IMG_0664.jpeg


The theory is that the #4 cylinder "sees" a whole lot of airflow because of the oil cooler inlet and the rear baffle wall. The new deflector "should" keep the airflow from flowing down from the rear baffle wall and *not* interrupt the flow going to the oil cooler.
Test flight tomorrow, WX permitting.
Cheers.
Over the past 20+ years, on two RV-7s equipped with an IO-360-A1B6 (200HP, Angle Valve, Roller Lifters, Piston Squirters, Dual EI, 20°BTDC base timing), one parts built (Aerosport Power - Bart Lalonde) and the lycoming factory, I've consistently experienced a "cold" #4 CHT -- some 20 - 30°F colder than the rest of the cylinders.
On a lark, I visited a friend of mine with a Mooney 201 (aka, M20J, 205SE, MSE) equipped with nearly the same engine as my RV-7; an IO-360-A3B6. I noticed something unique about the baffling (picture)
View attachment IMG_0658.jpeg
Mooney puts a piece of baffle plate on the top rear of the #4 cylinder, just in front of and below the inlet to the Oil cooler. My friend never sees odd CHT spreads.
What the heck, time to do some metal bending -- I fabricated a piece of .032" to cover the same portion of the #4 cylinder, with a different attachment mechanism.
View attachment IMG_0664.jpeg


The theory is that the #4 cylinder "sees" a whole lot of airflow because of the oil cooler inlet and the rear baffle wall. The new deflector "should" keep the airflow from flowing down from the rear baffle wall and *not* interrupt the flow going to the oil cooler.
Test flight tomorrow, WX permitting.
Cheers.










