Hi,
I was wondering if anyone has had carb icing in a 180? Last weekend I was flying ifr at 15,000 and had issues with carb ice, but I'm not sure what I did wrong that it became an issue that I couldn't resolve with carb heat. To make a long story short I didn't expect to be in the clouds very long and had troubles keeping the engine running smoothly. I was over the mountains so descending below 14,000 was not a option. OAT started at +10 and was -18C when level at 15,000. I was in clouds - absolutely no airframe icing. I entered the clouds at -5C no carb heat. After about 5 min in the first cloud I did fly thru snow pellets for a few minutes. Everything was fine for about 10 min then got a burble in the engine. Mixture was leaned to rich of peak prior to cloud entry. As soon as I got the burble I added full carb heat - did not touch the mixture. Got the normal drop when heat is added and I left the heat on for about 2 min, then went back to full cold. Everything was good for about 10 min then the engine did it again. This time I went to full heat and left it on and took action to get out of the clouds. I climbed up to 17,000 and was still in the soup. After about 5 min, with the carb heat on the engine once again started running rough. I had to lean the mixture to get it to smoothen. I was diverting to the closest airport, which was 60 nm away so spent 30 min, in and out of the soup adjusting the mixture to keep the engine smooth. I completed a circling decent over the airport vfr, and prepared for the engine to quit at any moment. On final, once over the runway, about 40 feet above the runway, I adjusted the throttle slightly and the engine completely stopped. It was a harder landing than I would have liked, but it was safe. The engine was windmilling so I was able to restart after coasting down the runway. The engine now had a knock in it. After parking I noticed water was dripping from the belly just behind the engine. I did a run up after 15 min and it was perfect. A mechanic went thru the engine the next day for a couple of hours and nothing could be found - when in my mind confirmed carb ice. No water in the fuel sump was found for either tank.
So - what I'm trying to figure out is why carb heat did not look after the carb ice. I've heard different ideas ranging from I added heat too late and it couldn't catch up, to I should have gone full rich as soon as I added heat and leaving the mixture leaned counter acted the heat. I've also heard I should have added heat as soon as I entered the first cloud when the temp was below freezing. I won't allow myself to get into this situation again, but I'm still hoping to find out what I should have done differently from an engine management perspective to prevent the carb ice. I have a carb temp sensor system on order as I type.
Thanks
Larry