Greetings fellow flyers,
1964 pa30, stock engines. Mechanic thought we had glazed cylinders. Inboard cylinders on either side were introducing the bottom plugs to quite a bit of oil. Compression all good. I acceded to removal to rabbit turd and re-ring for an estimated $200 per jug. Just got a bill for almost 3k from local engine shop. Cylinders were instead overhauled. Was allowing airplane to be used for ME training. Works ok when I have time to instruct, not so well when relatively inexperienced MEI's fondle my friend. Think the poor girl was overheated and think I may have discovered the culprit. Take off fuel flow, with electric boost pumps on is between 14 and 14.5 gph at 1000'. As soon as I turn the boost pumps off, the fuel flow drops to 10.5 to 11 gph. There is a corresponding rise in egt across all 8 cylinders. The egt's are as high as at this point as I would see were I aggresively leaning at cruise altitude and power. Fuel flow rises, engine surges, and temps drop as soon as I bring aux pumps back on. The probelm is bilateral and almost identical on either side. Egt's are manually checked for individual cylinders. Consistent rise and and drop.
Both selector valves have been overhauled recently courtesy of Webco. The west coast fuel pump stc was also recentely installed. Everybody jumps to the mechanical pumps as the culprit, but seems like a test of probability that both would fail simultaneously. The sole theory posited thus far that makes sense to me is some kind of obstruction, perhaps of the filter, that the auxillary pump is able to overcome to establish proper prsessure at the servo.
If anybody has any theories or troubleshooting suggestions they can share, it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance