Gary, Pat,
Appreciate the input! I was on my way to the filters today. Results: Pulled the fuel servo and fuel selector screens- both perfectly clean. Pulled the spider apart- clean as well. Reassembled and pumped fuel through the system with the boost pump. Collected ~8 ounces of fuel from each line at the injectors (with the injectors disconnected). No green goop. I finally saw a little bit of dirt settle after I combined the fuel into one jug for the lawn mower, but no green goop, clean filters, and very little dirt (though I realize it only takes a little). Interesting nonetheless. I didn't re-run the engine. I'm working on a stubborn oil pressure/prop governor problem in parallel, but will run it again tomorrow.
I clearly need to run it some more on the ground and monitor. It's possible it's worked itself through, but I doubt it. I ultrasonically clean the injectors in Hoppe's #8, then blow them out when done. I wonder if any leftover Hoppe's solvent is combining with the 100LL to make the green color? I may have to try cleaning them again in Acetone if they clog up again.
I'm still open to ideas!!
In other fun news, my prop is auto feathering on me (same engine). The engine is 400 SMOH in 2006. Bench tested my governor immediately. Had excessive internal leakage. Purchased a freshly overhauled governor and slapped it on- same problem. Hot oil at 1000 rpm or less = auto feather. The prop checked out good- no oil in the hub that would indicate internal leakage. When I got this plane, this engine's oil pressure was at 110 PSI at max power, 20 psi over max MM limit. I readjusted down to 90psi. It clicked that the prop started acting up when I did that. Bumped the oil pressure back up to 110 psi and no more prop issues. Someone has clearly gone through this before and bandaged it. The governor needs 40 psi to operate. My oil pressure at the accessory case (measured by external gauge) must be 50 psi with hot oil to keep the prop from feathering at idle. So I either have a blockage in the oil gallery on the accessory case starving the governor, a clogged oil line to the prop, or my leak rate past my forward main (engine) bearing is too much. This could get ugly. Nervously waiting on getting off work tomorrow to go run the tests. I'm praying for a clogged line! I don't want to split my case for an out of tolerance bearing!! If you haven't seen it yet, Lycoming at least has a Service Letter for performing a leak test on the bearing on-aircraft. Basically a simple compression test at 40 psi. Must leak between 6-35 psi to be acceptable. Anything less and the bearing has excessive clearance (but is at least getting good oil). Anything more and the fwd bearing has likely shifted and is being starved of oil. I'll report back on both problems tomorrow! Either one starves the prop of oil. I've never personally seen this happen, but found research from others where it had.