Hi All,
I had several months prior suffered a stuck exhaust valve on #4 cylinder as evidenced by a brief but complete loss of EGT. Prior to this the engine had perfect compressions and was running smoothly with no issues.
It was repaired with in-situ valve reaming with the McFarlane reamer. Compressions were fine at this time and this cured the issue.
Since then, I have been flying with reasonable regularity, and despite the winter have about 8 hrs on it in the past 3 weeks. I do preheat well before flying (I am in the Midwest).
One thing I have noticed however is a lower EGT in the repaired cylinder compared to prior, that has dropped with time over the initial repair. On average it is around 100 degrees lower than the rest. It also tends to fluctuate 10-15 degrees whereas the other cylinders are rock steady once at steady state cruise.
Despite having a carb as an O-360, I run at very moderate power settings, and as such EGT's have been surprisingly even between cylinders prior to the valve issue.
I suspect this cylinder is having an exhaust valve issue, most namely burning/poor sealing of the affected valve. I would assume the top 2 culprits are a guide or seat problem. I am not sure if the reaming process has somehow damaged the guide? After reaming the clearance was about on the loose side but not grossly out of spec. I used the smaller McFarland reamer as well.
Anyways my concern is that the next step after a burned valve, is a dropped valve. I am thinking of grounding the plane and replacing the cylinder with a new cylinder. I don't trust attempting an in situ valve lapping at this point.
Is this a reasonable plan of attack?
I had several months prior suffered a stuck exhaust valve on #4 cylinder as evidenced by a brief but complete loss of EGT. Prior to this the engine had perfect compressions and was running smoothly with no issues.
It was repaired with in-situ valve reaming with the McFarlane reamer. Compressions were fine at this time and this cured the issue.
Since then, I have been flying with reasonable regularity, and despite the winter have about 8 hrs on it in the past 3 weeks. I do preheat well before flying (I am in the Midwest).
One thing I have noticed however is a lower EGT in the repaired cylinder compared to prior, that has dropped with time over the initial repair. On average it is around 100 degrees lower than the rest. It also tends to fluctuate 10-15 degrees whereas the other cylinders are rock steady once at steady state cruise.
Despite having a carb as an O-360, I run at very moderate power settings, and as such EGT's have been surprisingly even between cylinders prior to the valve issue.
I suspect this cylinder is having an exhaust valve issue, most namely burning/poor sealing of the affected valve. I would assume the top 2 culprits are a guide or seat problem. I am not sure if the reaming process has somehow damaged the guide? After reaming the clearance was about on the loose side but not grossly out of spec. I used the smaller McFarland reamer as well.
Anyways my concern is that the next step after a burned valve, is a dropped valve. I am thinking of grounding the plane and replacing the cylinder with a new cylinder. I don't trust attempting an in situ valve lapping at this point.
Is this a reasonable plan of attack?

