Flight #2 & 3- working off the sqawks on the PA-30 restoration. As usual, I don't have a "normal" problem. It's always gotta be something difficult to track down...
Problem: Oil temp on the #2 engine spikes to 230 deg F on descent from 4000' MSL once power is retarded and up to 240 deg after landing. Oil remains cool (200 deg F) during climb at 120 mph (cowl flaps open) and cruise (cowl flaps closed). Oil pressure is 70 psi (smack in the green). Single digital CHT on #4 reads 315-320 deg F during descent with high oil temp. Opening cowl flaps and increasing mixture has no effect. Have not had a chance to increase airspeed much because it always occurs descending into the pattern. OAT is 80-85 deg F.
Troubleshooting:
Checked for any airflow obstructions in/around the cylinders and the whole cowling.
Confirmed cylinder baffling is installed properly around cylinders.
Confirmed engine baffling is sealing tightly.
Tested vernatherm. Worked, but had a smiley face on the valve face. Replaced with new (seat looked good).
Fabricated clip to move existing fuel line 3" forward of oil cooler.
Tested accuracy of oil temp sending unit by heating in a pot of oil using a calibrated thermometer.
Tested actual oil temp in sump using 3' thermometer to confirm 225 deg F oil temp after taxi back and shutdown.
Pulled all oil lines (only 1 yr old anyhow) and confirmed no obstructions.
Pulled oil cooler and confirmed no obstructions.
Ran compression test- all at least 72/80.
Oil consumption is fairly low. I don't have an established pattern yet (only flown 3 flights) but it definitely burns no more than 1/4 quart per hour, so I'm assuming no significant blow by.
I'm sending the oil cooler out for overhaul. It's possible there's carbon build up internally, but it has good clean fins. The fact that it only does it when the power's reduced makes me think it's an airflow problem. I noticed there is a 0.25 inch gap between the bottom of the #4 cyl and the oil cooler. Is this by design?? It's on both engines, but would allow air to push below the oil cooler vs. through the cooler. Reduced air pressure due to reduced power may not apply enough cooling flow through the oil cooler. Pictures attached. Both pictures are looking aft from the #4 cylinder. The oil cooler has been removed (hence the big hole in the aft baffle). Can anyone confirm this is the correct baffling for this area between the #4 cyl and cooler?
Other ideas? Engine is 400 SMOH in 2006. If I had bearing going bad, I should really see hot temps all the time, not just descent. I've shot the cylinders with an infrared thermometer immediately after shut down. There's no appreciable difference between them. Could be an internal bearing I suppose, but highly unlikely (I hope!!)
This restoration has been so frustrating...