We experienced a 'bent' push rod (see previous post below) which have since been replaced and the cylinder was also sent away and refurbished and reinstalled.
Yesterday we took the aircraft for a planned one hour flight to get the engine parts moving after maintenance work completed.
However, we have now detected that there is a vibration (not evident before push rod incident) that can be felt through the controls when climbing out and in the cruise. It appears to be a very smooth vibration in the same cadence as the engine. It is not like a rough running engine vibration in fact the cylinder temps were all good across all cylinders throughout the flight. We had a second flight attempt as it appeared to clear itself on the ground but the vibration was evident on both flights.
Sounds odd but it is a very smooth, fast and uniform vibration that can be felt through controls and rudder pedals,
We had a chat on the ground and did not arrive at any conclusion.
Anyone else had a similar experience and can throw up any possible causes?
Many thanks
Previous post:
We are based in the UK and have a 1959 Comanche 250 which is fitted with an EDM700 displaying exhaust gas/cylinder head temps for each cylinder. On a recent trip around Southern France and Spain we noticed that on cold start the display for #2 cylinder did not show up on the EDM. This appeared to clear itself after a couple of minutes and all power checks were good and when flying the cylinder showed temps in the normal range. It happened to 2-3 times on the trip but not when the engine was started when warm/hot.
Anyway we returned to the UK and have done a number of flights since then with no problems indicated.
Couple of weeks ago and shortly after departure and in the cruise the display for #2 disappeared from the EDM and the engine started running very rough with a lot of vibration. Returned to the airfield and the local maintenance outfit had a look and found a bent push rod on #2 cylinder (and also the the outer tube was bent). This was clearly the cause of the fault in flight and I guess the valve was sticking.
Has anyone experienced a similar fault and if so any advice out there on a possible cause would be much appreciated?
Note: For the last couple of years we have only carried out an oil change on the aircraft's Annual (fly about 70-100 hours per year) - previously we used to do it every 50 hours, could this be a contributory factor to the bent push rod?
Thanks in advance.