Last week after starting my PA24-250, I felt it was running a bit rough at idle and checked the JPI. #2 EGT was off-the-scale cold, while other EGTs were appropriately warm. I slowly increased rpm and at around 1200 rpm #2 began to register some temp but was still much lower than the others. I tried leaning and switching mags but it made no difference. Continuing to increase rpm up to about 1800 brought #2 up to normal and even with the others and operation felt smooth, but reducing rpm back to idle caused #2 to plummet off the scale again. At that point I was concerned about a possible stuck valve so shut it down.
Downloading the JPI data confirmed the EGT did what it appeared to be doing, and that during this 4 minute engine run the #2 CHT rose less and much more slowly than the others. Since then my mechanic has checked #2 compression (78/80), verified the valves appear to moving normally, borescoped the cylinder and valves, pulled the valve cover and performed the Lycoming Mandatory Service Bulletin 388C procedures, changed the oil and filter and checked the filter element and oil screen (oil analysis results still pending), with no abnormalities found. The engine has about 300 hrs since Mattituck major, Oil is Aeroshell 80 Plus with Camguard and had 25 hours on it, OAT at the time was 30F but the airplane was just pulled out of a heated hangar where it is always kept at about 60F. I haven't had the opportunity to start it up again, but am concerned that no explanation for the #2 anomaly could be found. My IA consulted with some guru in Tulsa who said stuck valves are more likely to occur when the engine is hot, not when relatively cold like this one, but...?? Is this the typical "Lycoming morning sickness" of a sticking valve (with no evidence of sticking now) or something else?
Have any of you seen this sort of thing or know what it would be due to? Any help or advice will be appreciated.
John Johnson