I purchased an RV-8 with an IO-360 (200HP) with Hartzel CS prop. New to injected and CS after nearly 40 years of flying lower powered fixed pitch planes.
I am trying to get initial practice, essentially doing takeoff and landings. Since I am staying in the pattern, the prop or mixture basically aren't touched. I can only get two circuits in before the oil temp starts getting over 200 degrees. Once it gets there it rises raather quickly. By my 3rd landing it is starting to get into the yellow. Basically done for the day. This are my reading:
Oil temperature 224.
EGT CHT
#1 1141 291
#2 1128 292
#3 1170 339
#4 1105 295
Number 3 cylinder is definitely hotter than the rest, but this seems to be my typical experience with several diferent planes that I have owned. Is this typically that big of a difference spread?
I removed the cowling and checked all the baffling, which looked good. No oil cooler blockage. The oil cooler is mounted at the rear of the baffling. The vernatherm being stuck, or the oil cooler might be restricted, is a possibility.
My thoughts are that flying at the slow speeds of pattern work are a contributing factor, but would like advice/comments on what else it could be. Ideas?
Thank you
I am trying to get initial practice, essentially doing takeoff and landings. Since I am staying in the pattern, the prop or mixture basically aren't touched. I can only get two circuits in before the oil temp starts getting over 200 degrees. Once it gets there it rises raather quickly. By my 3rd landing it is starting to get into the yellow. Basically done for the day. This are my reading:
Oil temperature 224.
EGT CHT
#1 1141 291
#2 1128 292
#3 1170 339
#4 1105 295
Number 3 cylinder is definitely hotter than the rest, but this seems to be my typical experience with several diferent planes that I have owned. Is this typically that big of a difference spread?
I removed the cowling and checked all the baffling, which looked good. No oil cooler blockage. The oil cooler is mounted at the rear of the baffling. The vernatherm being stuck, or the oil cooler might be restricted, is a possibility.
My thoughts are that flying at the slow speeds of pattern work are a contributing factor, but would like advice/comments on what else it could be. Ideas?
Thank you