I have a new-to-me F1 Rocket. Took it up for my first real test flight yesterday. As a result, I have several questions for the smart people here - I’ll start with this one:
I’m experiencing some backfiring at low power settings. They seemed like somewhat minor “pops” when reducing power to idle at 9,500 MSL for some stalls. I operate from a pretty high home field (KFLY), and the density altitude at the field yesterday was about 9,500 feet. I leaned to max RPM during runup, then a touch towards rich.
For the low-power operations (stalls), I had the boost pump on, and moved the mixture lever maybe an inch further forward. As I said above, I got some “pops” most times I pulled the throttle to idle for stalls.
Then, back in the pattern, the “pops” at low power got more frequent and maybe more pronounced. It was especially noticeable when I pulled the throttle to idle, and it continued as long as the power was back, even if I added a little power. I flew several patterns where I pulled the power to idle at the turn to base, and kept it at idle until touchdown (practice engine-out approaches). Apparently the backfiring was pretty noticeable from the ground, because a got a call on CTAF from someone on the ground saying I was backfiring pretty loudly and consistently in the pattern. I gradually increased the mixture to “full rich” over the course of several patterns to try to reduce the backfiring, but to no avail.
Other info which may be helpful: it’s an IO-540 D4A5 with Airflow Performance fuel injection, one Slick mag and one Lightspeed mag. I have a 3-blade MT prop.
Any thoughts or recommendations?
I’m pretty sure that the “pops” weren’t due to a “too-lean” condition (since they were eventually happening with “full rich” selected).
Possibly “afterfiring” because I was too rich?
The MT prop was full forward (fine pitch) and boost pump was on every time I heard the pops - could it be the prop driving the engine and pulling in more fuel then could be burned at idle?
I was moving the throttle to idle pretty briskly in the pattern - would it help to move it to idle more smoothly (3-4 seconds)?
I haven’t had a chance to check for leaks in the intake or exhaust yet…
I’m open to your suggestions.
Also - is this popping potentially causing damage to the engine, or is it just sub-optimal?
I’m experiencing some backfiring at low power settings. They seemed like somewhat minor “pops” when reducing power to idle at 9,500 MSL for some stalls. I operate from a pretty high home field (KFLY), and the density altitude at the field yesterday was about 9,500 feet. I leaned to max RPM during runup, then a touch towards rich.
For the low-power operations (stalls), I had the boost pump on, and moved the mixture lever maybe an inch further forward. As I said above, I got some “pops” most times I pulled the throttle to idle for stalls.
Then, back in the pattern, the “pops” at low power got more frequent and maybe more pronounced. It was especially noticeable when I pulled the throttle to idle, and it continued as long as the power was back, even if I added a little power. I flew several patterns where I pulled the power to idle at the turn to base, and kept it at idle until touchdown (practice engine-out approaches). Apparently the backfiring was pretty noticeable from the ground, because a got a call on CTAF from someone on the ground saying I was backfiring pretty loudly and consistently in the pattern. I gradually increased the mixture to “full rich” over the course of several patterns to try to reduce the backfiring, but to no avail.
Other info which may be helpful: it’s an IO-540 D4A5 with Airflow Performance fuel injection, one Slick mag and one Lightspeed mag. I have a 3-blade MT prop.
Any thoughts or recommendations?
I’m pretty sure that the “pops” weren’t due to a “too-lean” condition (since they were eventually happening with “full rich” selected).
Possibly “afterfiring” because I was too rich?
The MT prop was full forward (fine pitch) and boost pump was on every time I heard the pops - could it be the prop driving the engine and pulling in more fuel then could be burned at idle?
I was moving the throttle to idle pretty briskly in the pattern - would it help to move it to idle more smoothly (3-4 seconds)?
I haven’t had a chance to check for leaks in the intake or exhaust yet…
I’m open to your suggestions.
Also - is this popping potentially causing damage to the engine, or is it just sub-optimal?
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