Somewhat off topic, but a good starting point. I put new turbos on my 260C a few months ago and have been chasing oil leaking into the turbos since. Tried all the usual suspects including replacing the inlet check valve three times and the outlet check valve once even though it is obviously well scavenged. Even replaced the slightly lower and offending turbo.
We are now down to assuming the oil is coming from the crossover plumbing between the turbos. On the 260C turbo, the feed line comes through a check valve (532A-2MP-27) then goes to a tee with a pressure switch for the warning light (not standard on 260C turbo's, but added to mine), then another tee that has an 0.093" diameter orifice. The other legs of the tee feed the two turbos. The outlets of the turbos run to a common catch can (vented to breather) which is drawn down by a scavenge pump through a flapper style check valve.
What we suspect is that all the oil downstream of the orifice is siphoning out to the low turbo after shutdown. This also raises the concern that the orifice and warning system are ineffective in supplying equal oil to both turbos or monitoring that both get some.
One potential solution is to feed the turbos independently: the feed line would go to a tee first, then two separate check valves, monitor switches, and restrictors for each turbo. This would make it like the oil feed to a single turbo, like on the PA30/39. Except we can't determine if there is even a restrictor orifice on a PA30/39 turbo installation. For the same flow as my 0.093" orifice gives two turbos, the PA30/39 should have an orifice about 0.065" diameter.
Can anyone tell me if it does, and what the Rajay part number is?
And yes, I've checked with Bob at Rajay parts, and am still waiting on an answer. I'm afraid it may be hidden in a fitting improperly called out as a regular AN fitting, and so he can't find it, or it might not exist at all.
So can anyone tell me if there is an orifice anywhere in the turbo oil feed line on a PA30/39? Ideally it is between the pressure switch and the turbo itself.
Thanks!
Phil