by John Johnson » Sat Oct 02, 2010 9:16 pm
High John,
I've been struggling with high CHT's on my #3 & 4 cylinders (O-540: see elsewhere in this forum) but your problem sounds different to me. The thing that concerns me is the inconsistency of your CHT "fevers" and the episode of engine roughness. Since your baffles are good, I don't see how it could be an airflow problem. The place I'd check first: Magneto timing needs to be exact - I found mine about 2.5 degrees retarded, and resetting to 25 (as nearly exactly as my mechanic could make it) seems to have brought all my CHT's down about 10-15 degrees (though still not down enough). Advanced timing is even worse, as the detonation margin drops way off with advanced timing, even sometimes if advanced only 1 to 1.5 degrees. If your timing's advanced at all, I'd get it set back.
If the timing's perfect, it might be worth opening or (re-opening if that was done at annual) the magnetos themselves to be sure there's nothing malicious going on in there and no evidence of arcing or such.
The next concern I might have would be intermittent sticking of a valve in #3. Usually it's exhaust valve sticking that causes intermittent roughness, but usually that causes the CHT to drop and EGT to rise. Did you notice what those two parameters were doing while the engine was rough? A sticking intake valve, much less common, will cause roughness and high CHT, I understand, and is a much more serious problem from what I've heard - possibly leading to prompt engine failure if not resolved. It would worth a quick borescope to be sure there's no obvious evidence of valve damage or burning, and shouldn't be at all expensive to do.
Of course uneven fuel flow will cause uneven CHT's and EGT's, and all our non-fuel injected Lycomings have some of that, but it's hard to see how that could suddenly cause a single CHT to go to 433. And I don't see how the annual inspection could be a cause unless they mis-timed it. Sounds to me like some sort of problem related directly to #3 cylinder or it's ignition sytem.
I'm no mechanic (you could guess that) but I've spent a lot effort lately researching my high CHT problems, and the above are some of the things I've learned lately. Hope it helps, and let me know what you find out - it might help my problem as well!
Regards,
John Johnson