Setup:
RV-7A, Superior XP-IO-360 with a constant speed prop. ~800h since new. This was the first flight after a 2-3 week holiday. I recently switched to running G100UL fuel and have put about two tanks through. 45F OAT
Story:
The runup and checks were normal. During takeoff the engine was running strong and I thought thought to myself how amazing it is to be able to fly and in particular a lightly loaded RV! At perhaps around 1000 ft AGL, I glanced over at the expanded engine monitor area on the second display and noticed that the cylinder 4 EGT was significantly higher than the others and the CHT was also significantly higher than the others. This is abnormal! I pulled the throttle back to about 50% and the abnormally high cylinder 4 CHTs started dropping. Satisfied that I wasn't going to be melting a cylinder immediately, I flew a normal-but-slightly-high pattern and landed. The engine seemed to be running normally on the ground, so in the interest of data collection I ran some tests: I performed a mag check which was normal, with EGTs rising as expected. I then ran the engine up to about 2200RPM, which is as much as I can do before the airplane starts skidding. The result was that the cylinder 4 EGT was hotter than the others and the #4 CHT climbed more rapidly and didn't level off as the other CHTs did. I should have swept the mixture during this process, but I didn't.
Data:
This is where I could use your help! My guess is that cylinder 4 was running leaner than the others. This could be due to less fuel (restricted injector, spider issue) or more air (intake leak). I'm not sure what to make of the higher fuel pressure.
Have you encountered this before or have ideas of what might be going on?
Thanks!
RV-7A, Superior XP-IO-360 with a constant speed prop. ~800h since new. This was the first flight after a 2-3 week holiday. I recently switched to running G100UL fuel and have put about two tanks through. 45F OAT
Story:
The runup and checks were normal. During takeoff the engine was running strong and I thought thought to myself how amazing it is to be able to fly and in particular a lightly loaded RV! At perhaps around 1000 ft AGL, I glanced over at the expanded engine monitor area on the second display and noticed that the cylinder 4 EGT was significantly higher than the others and the CHT was also significantly higher than the others. This is abnormal! I pulled the throttle back to about 50% and the abnormally high cylinder 4 CHTs started dropping. Satisfied that I wasn't going to be melting a cylinder immediately, I flew a normal-but-slightly-high pattern and landed. The engine seemed to be running normally on the ground, so in the interest of data collection I ran some tests: I performed a mag check which was normal, with EGTs rising as expected. I then ran the engine up to about 2200RPM, which is as much as I can do before the airplane starts skidding. The result was that the cylinder 4 EGT was hotter than the others and the #4 CHT climbed more rapidly and didn't level off as the other CHTs did. I should have swept the mixture during this process, but I didn't.
Data:
- Attached is a photo I took of the engine monitor during climb out.
- Attached are screenshots from the G3X Touch data log.
- A review of previous flights shows good alignment normally between the cylinders for EGT, CHT
- Fuel pressure on takeoff was ~37 PSI, dropping to ~25 PSI when I turned the fuel pump off. Looking back through the data from five or six recent flights, it seems this fuel or the correlation of a higher fuel pressure during periods where I think I was running the electric fuel pump is something that has only occurred recently, within the last 3 or 4 flights. Before then it was steady for the whole flight at ~25 PSI
- I was time limited today, so my inspection thus far has been: Remove top cowling. Nothing visually amiss. Remove #4 injector. No visible debris, obstructions. Remove #4 top spark plug. Looks undamaged, but needs a better inspection. Borescoped cylinder #4. Looks normal. The only thing I saw abnormal were two small metallic balls in the lower spark plug well. Checked intake and exhaust for security. Secure.
- I plan on removing the bottom spark plug. Checking the intake and exhaust. Checking the fuel filters. Performing a flow test.
This is where I could use your help! My guess is that cylinder 4 was running leaner than the others. This could be due to less fuel (restricted injector, spider issue) or more air (intake leak). I'm not sure what to make of the higher fuel pressure.
Have you encountered this before or have ideas of what might be going on?
Thanks!
