ICS Friends:
Ever since I first bought my PA-30B, I've occasionally seen slight variations in the left engine RPM. Usually both are rock solid and I have no problem keeping the props in sync. But on occasion, I would get brief periods of the props going in and out of sync (audibly) and the left RPM needle would bounce up and down +/-50 RPM... then become steady, the bounce again. No rhyme or reason just occasionally.
Both of my engines are pretty tight in terms of little oil seepage but recently I've seen more from the left side which we tracked down to the prop governor.
Because of the slight leak and the occasional wandering RPM, I looked at my 8130-3 file and sent the governor to the shop who overhauled it for the previous owner about 700 flight hours ago (when the engines were overhauled so were all the accessories). I was pretty impressed with Mike Grow of Professional Aircraft Accessories, Inc. talking to him on the phone. His colleagues tell me he has 40+ years experience in these governors and it showed from the conversation.
The Mike and his shop bench tested it for me and much to my surprise said the governor was perfect. The only leak was a very slight one in the middle section so he replaced that gasket, ran it again for hours on the bench at full temp and said it was working perfectly no issues. He said an overhaul was not necessary and would be a waste of money (always impresses me when a shop turns down extra work because it's truly not necessary even tho they could easily get it if they wanted to...). Anyways... back the governor came and we reinstalled it with new gaskets between the governor and accessory adapter and for good measure - new gasket between the accessory adapter and the engine casing.
Flew to Chattanooga over the holidays (5.4hrs round trip) with no problems but there was still the very occasional left engine wandering RPM and looking in the engine nacelle the governor is once again a little wet with oil (tho less than before). Really it's mostly the Bendix RSA unit and cowl flap below that get wet but the oil seems to be coming from what I've been told is the pressure relief valve on the governor above as seen in the attached pic.
Of bigger concern, on Thursday this past week (2 days ago) I flew the plane to Asheville, NC and back. About 1/2 way to AVL the left engine RPM seemed to start bumping around more than normal and If found myself doing a lot of work to try and re-sync the props. Now it was also a very windy day and flying over the mountains (East Coast version not the Rockies) it was fairly smooth but there were a fair number of up and down drafts so maybe this contributed...?
On the flight back from AVL the left engine prop RPM was even worse. I tried to set them at 2400 for cruise and the right engine stayed fairly solid but the left engine seemed to bounce between 2350 and 2500. It would center around 2400 but then constantly surge back and forth creating a very annoying yawing affect on the aircraft as I flew home. The last 40-50 min of the trip it got a lot better but far from perfect.
After landing, inside the cowl - once again oil coming from that relief valve (I'd throughly cleaned it with isopropyl alcohol and dried it before so as to be clear in terms of new oil seepage). We checked the prop governor cable to see if there might be play in it such that it would allow the governor to be moved around by engine torque even tho the control in the cockpit was fixed in place - that did not seem to be the issue but we are going to take a second look.
Mike Grow the prop gov guru was out of the shop on Friday but I hope to chat with him next week for advice. Before he did tell me that such RPM variations can also be caused by the prop itself having issues. We are considering swapping the left and right governors to see if the problem moves to the right side but that's a bit of a headache. i'd like to know why I'm losing oil from the pressure relief valve when Mike told me there were no leaks and all was good on his test bench.
I've also been told that the oil line from the governor to the prop (runs under the cylinders on the right side of the engine) can be an issue - particularly at the flange where it meets the governor. They are known to crack and leak according to Mike but we checked mine carefully and that does not appear to be the source of the leak.
Anyway I am not sure if my oil seepage has anything to do with the RPM issue or not - perhaps connected issues, or perhaps not. Any thoughts or feedback or experience on this would be appreciated.
UPDATE: I've posted some iPhone videos of the RPM issue in action from my flight two days ago to Drop Box. There are three videos that can be found here -> . Not that it matters but the first video is from the trip down to AVL and the other two were on the way home when I felt the problem was worse Looking at the videos I am not sure any one looks better than the other but just FYI.
ANOTHER UPDATE: I just read on this page -> under the section near the bottom entitled "Other Factors" that:
"The Hartzell used on the Aztec and some twin Comanches relies on just the air-charge in the prop, the ATM (aerodynamic twisting moment) and the internal spring to counteract or balance the governor pressure. There are no counterweights. If the dome air charge is low, the RPM will be airspeed sensitive; that is, the RPM will increase with airspeed and decrease with airspeed. This is true of most Hartzells but especially of this particular model because of the lack of counterweights."This may be relevant as I do find the left dome leaks down over time whereas the right dome holds it's pressure well. I just set both dome pressures before my Thanksgiving Chattanooga trip. I typically check them every month or so per the book. I did not check them before my AVL flight last week...
- Charles