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firstflight
11-08-2012, 08:24 PM
Just received the email below from out local FAAST Team representative concerning ground operations.

"During the discussion a couple of operating habits came to light..... Leaning on taxiing out for takeoff : a carbureted engine has a fixed idle jet. That means a fixed amount of fuel goes to the engine. If you are below 1400 rpm the mixture control does nothing. You should be below 1400 RPM taxiing. Fuel not only cools but lubricates. Unless there is specific information in the POH/AFM that tells you to lean on the ground...it is not a good technique!

The last issue is plug fouling. This is fairly rare yet I hear about it all the time. Clearing a plug should be done at no higher than run-up RPM and should only occur for less than 30 seconds. Repeated plug fouling or lack of clearing per the manufacturers recommendations means you have a mechanical problem. Get an AMT to look at it. It might be the wrong plug, too cold of a plug, poor timing, etc.

YOU ONLY HAVE ONE ENGINE AND YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON YOUR KNOWLEDGE OF HOW TO CARE FOR IT. "

At our club we insist that our members lean during taxi - I am a little surprised that they are also suggesting that the idle jet is set to 1400 rpm. Should this not be set to 600 -650 rpm ? Since this is from a source of some authority just wanted to check if I'm missing something ?

Hiperbiper
11-08-2012, 11:56 PM
Just received the email below from out local FAAST Team representative concerning ground operations.

"During the discussion a couple of operating habits came to light..... Leaning on taxiing out for takeoff : a carbureted engine has a fixed idle jet. That means a fixed amount of fuel goes to the engine. If you are below 1400 rpm the mixture control does nothing. You should be below 1400 RPM taxiing. Fuel not only cools but lubricates. Unless there is specific information in the POH/AFM that tells you to lean on the ground...it is not a good technique!
So if the mixture control doesn't do anything below 1400 how does this guy stop his motor at the end of the flight? A log in the prop? The fixed idle jet (orfice) is goverened by two things: flow thru the venturi section of the carb and fuel avialable to be pulled from the idle jet. The mixture control limits the amount of fuel available to be pulled thru the orffice. Hence you can (and should) lean on the ground.
He is correct in one reguard; a rich mixture DOES cool the motor but it is at the top end of the RPM range not the idle/taxi portion of the flight!

The last issue is plug fouling. This is fairly rare yet I hear about it all the time. Clearing a plug should be done at no higher than run-up RPM and should only occur for less than 30 seconds. Repeated plug fouling or lack of clearing per the manufacturers recommendations means you have a mechanical problem. Get an AMT to look at it. It might be the wrong plug, too cold of a plug, poor timing, etc.

...fairly rare yet I hear about it all the time. Which is it?? Someone should tell this Boob that forced use of 100LL in a low compression motor meant to use much less lead will foul the plugs in short order. Leaning on the ground (which bozo doesn't think is possible) TCP and lean runups post-flight help to keep the plugs clean. Unless you are using oil AND fouling the plugs an A&P ain't gonna do anything but lighten your wallet.


YOU ONLY HAVE ONE ENGINE AND YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON YOUR KNOWLEDGE OF HOW TO CARE FOR IT. "
Then this guy is a dead man walking...


At our club we insist that our members lean during taxi - I am a little surprised that they are also suggesting that the idle jet is set to 1400 rpm. Should this not be set to 600 -650 rpm ? Since this is from a source of some authority just wanted to check if I'm missing something ?

The idle jet as well as the mid- and high range jets are controlled by the throttle (butterfly position/vaccum signal) and the mixture control (availible fuel thru each jet). You set the idle by limiting the air flowing thru the carb venturi...less air passing the butterfly the less fuel is picked up by the airstream and the less RPM the motor achieves.



Chris

WLIU
11-09-2012, 07:18 AM
The official advice sort of simplifies everything to the point of uselessness. But if you do not want a detailed explanation and are happy with a dumbed down operating rule, stop reading now.

First, the "jets" are not cockpit adjustable. In fact, they are fixed. You can control airflow and fuel flow from the cockpit. The typical aircraft carburetor has an idle circuit that includes a jet, and a mid-range circuit with another jet. The airplane idle speed and fuel mixture is set using two knobs on the carburetor that are not connected to any cockpit controls. With the cowling off you set the engine idle speed and the idle fuel flow using those on-carburetor controls. Best done in the winter (high air density) at sea level if you want to tweak it to the lowest fuel flow where the engine runs. Otherwise you might fly from Colorado to Delaware in January and find that the engine shuts down when you pull the throttle to idle to land. The idle circuit is the main contributor to fuel flow up through 1400 RPM. Then its contribution to fuel flow becomes smaller than what the mid-range circuit provides. Note: One does not turn off and another turn on. They all keep contributing fuel and it is the proportion that changes.

The main control that pilots have for engine power is the throttle control. As noted in a post above, the cockpit throttle control is connected to the carburetor butterfly that allows more or less air mass into the engine. The air flow through the carburetor pulls fuel through the jets into that air flow. The on-carburetor adjustable idle controls and the cockpit connected mixture control set the amount of fuel that is available to mix into the air mass in the carburetor throat.

As stated above, the operation of the idle circuit and the mid-range circuit overlap. So even at idle RPM's, the mid-range circuit is providing a little fuel. Once the RPM gets to around 1400RPM, the mid-range circuit starts providing most of the fuel, but the idle circuit is still contributing its fuel.

So when you are taxiing at 900RPM, and you pull the mixture out, you are not reducing the fuel provided by the carburetor idle circuit, but you ARE reducing the fuel provided by the carburetor circuits that provide fuel flow at higher throttle settings (butterfly more open). This reduction in fuel flow, and slightly higher combustion temps, can help keep you plugs from building more lead in them and therefore fouling.

So I will offer the opinion that leaning while taxiing with a carbureted engine certainly won't hurt and will likely help.

So why do plugs foul? I will offer the opinion that this is often the result of the pilot over-priming and simply washing some dirt into a lower plug to short it out. Every engine model seems to need a different amount of prime on a cold day and I think that I see way too many pilots put way too much prime into their engines. Too much gas is worse than not enough. Read the manual. One of my pet peeves is watching a guy who is used to flying behind a Continental try to prime a Lyco the same way. Or vice versa. They are different animals at start time.

On the topic of clearing a fouled spark plug, my observation is that the traditional technique of running the RPM up to 2000 and leaning for 30 secs or so is marginally effective. My personal experience is that what clears a fouled spark plug is increased heat and pressure in the combustion chamber. So my personal technique is to point the airplane in a direction where the prop wash will not blow anyone or anything away, pull the control stick or yoke full aft, stand on the brakes, and run the rpm up to 2200 or 2300. If you have an engine monitor that shows you what is happening in all of your cylinders, you will see the problem plug start running and can immediately reduce the throttle back to mag check RPM. If you are not comfortable with this, then taxi back to the hangar, pull and clean plugs, and try to execute a better, cleaner, restart.

Every airplane is a little different so the best thing that you can do is read your manual and look under the cowling to see how it works.

Hope this info is helpful,

Wes
N78PS

Frank Giger
11-09-2012, 10:43 AM
Doesn't a lot of this depend on the airport itself?

At our little airport very little time is spent on taxi operations....maybe two minutes from hangar area to threshold, in the walking-slow taxi of a Champ to the typical end for take-off.

By the time one adjusted the mixture for taxi it would be time to put it back for run-up and take-off (non-towered, usually vacant).

firstflight
11-09-2012, 12:35 PM
Thanks to Chris & Wes for illuminating the overlap between idle and mid range circuit and for the clear discussion over fixed on-carb settings V's pilot controllable settings. Typically rpm speed at taxi is around 1,100 rpm - so well into the range where the higher fuel flow settings are contributing.


I have always understood that the richer the idle fuel mixture is, the more deposits on the spark plug. Whilst there may be other reasons for not leaning whilst taxiing, Frank points out one - I found the blanket statement that " it is just not good practice" alarming.


The point about over priming is well noted and actually this would have been a much more helpful operational point to make - As Wes says It is easier to put more fuel in than take it out. The aim again being to reduce the amount of combustion deposits created by excess fuel.

Bill Greenwood
11-12-2012, 05:41 PM
FirstFlight,

I disagree with the Fast info.

I can't recall all of it but here is what I know for sure:
In my Bonanza, which is a 1988 B 36 TC with a Cont TSIO 520, leaning at low rpm is good. If you prime as the manual says and start at full rich, the engine will start ok, but soon run sluggishly and "heavy", not really clean ,showing that it is too rich. As soon as you start, and idle at perhaps 700 rpm, I begin to lean the mixture. The engine will run cleaner, speed up several hundred rpm and smooth out. To get peak idle speed and smoothness, the mixture control will come back about 2/3 to 3/4 travel, and I can also see the combustion better and warmer on my Gem cylinder indicator.

So his claim that leaning the mixture doesn't affect it below 1400 rpm is definetly false, at least for my plane.

Now this is a fuel injected engine and I usually am starting at around 5000 feet to 8000 feet airport elevation, but I think it will also be true for many carb type engines like a Cessna 172.
!72s are also prone to fouling plugs in the 4 cylinder Lycomings if too rich at idle.

I think what Wes writes is much more of the truth than the Faast stuff.

Hiperbiper
11-12-2012, 10:56 PM
"So when you are taxiing at 900RPM, and you pull the mixture out, you are not reducing the fuel provided by the carburetor idle circuit, but you ARE reducing the fuel provided by the carburetor circuits that provide fuel flow at higher throttle settings (butterfly more open). This reduction in fuel flow, and slightly higher combustion temps, can help keep you plugs from building more lead in them and therefore fouling."

I disagree. If you taxi @ 900 RPM and pull the mixture back what happens? The motor quits! You just reduced the available fuel for ALL the jets (fixed runs/orfices) in the carb/FI unit including the idle circuit.
The mixture knob controls ALL fuel flow to the carb/FI unit low, mid and high. The same knob that leans the mixture for taxi on the idle jet allows you the lean for best mixture thru the main jet(s) in flight.
Try this for yourself: Start the motor. Allow it to warm up. Now pull the mixture back to the point the motor starts to quit at idle and then give it just enough mixture to make the motor run smooth. You are now idling at you leanest idle mixture you can (highest EGT).
Now; without touching the mixture knob, try and advance the throttle. The motor will die. What you have just found is the mixture knob DOES control the fuel that is availible to ALL the jets in the carb/fuel servo including the idle circuit.

Again; the throttle butterfly is controlled by the throttle knob and thus control the amount of AIR going to the motor.
The mixture control controls ALL orfices available to put fuel into the venturi. High and low it's the same control.


You can kill the motor at any throttle setting using the mixture control.


Chris

rwanttaja
11-13-2012, 12:36 AM
You can kill the motor at any throttle setting using the mixture control.
Not with a Stromberg. Mine won't kill the engine at idle, and, in fact, you can't even tell that the mixture is out until the RPM goes past a thousand or so. A lot of Strombergs just have the mixture control wired full rich.

But I do lean my carb when taxiing...pull it out all the way, in fact. I figure it's gotta be doing *something*, when I'm running 100LL.

I haven't had any plug fouling problems yet. Don't know if its the leaning, the Marvel Mystery Oil, or the sacred Paul Poberezy talisman on the altar in my hangar.

Ron Wanttaja

WLIU
11-13-2012, 06:53 AM
"Now; without touching the mixture knob, try and advance the throttle. The motor will die. What you have just found is the mixture knob DOES control the fuel that is availible to ALL the jets in the carb/fuel servo including the idle circuit."

You are incorrect in your understanding of how the carburetor idle circuit works. What you example has done is to shut down the mid-range circuit, then supply more air than the idle circuit can provide fuel for. The mixture downstream of the carburetor is now too lean to support combustion so the engine gets quiet. You can kill the engine by providing too much air or too much fuel. The example provided too much air for the amount of fuel that the idle circuit can provide.

Strombergs - My reccollection is that the small engine carbs in Champs and Cubs do not have a mixture control. So you cannot lean when taxiing making the distance to the runway the largest factor in the build up of lead in the plugs when running 100LL fuel. Another reason to find a grass airport where you do not have to wait for takeoff behind a bunch of IFR departures.

"I haven't had any plug fouling problems yet. Don't know if its the leaning, the Marvel Mystery Oil, or the sacred Paul Poberezy talisman on the altar in my hangar." I vote for the statue of "Pope" Paul.

Best of luck,

Wes
N78PS

martymayes
11-13-2012, 07:44 AM
Unless there is specific information in the POH/AFM that tells you to lean on the ground...it is not a good technique!

If it's such a bad idea, wonder why the FAA has a publications that advise to lean during taxi? The FAA continues with it's long history of contradicting itself. What else is new? Like a Kansas wheat stalk, just "lean" whichever way the wind blows.....

Richard Warner
11-15-2012, 05:45 PM
Some Strombergs(aka Tractor Carburetors) have mixture controls and some don't. The Stromberg on my 85 Champ has a mixture control wired to full rich. The 65 that was on it before didn't have one. I had no problem with fouled plugs with either engine.

Strombergs - My reccollection is that the small engine carbs in Champs and Cubs do not have a mixture control. So you cannot lean when taxiing making the distance to the runway the largest factor in the build up of lead in the plugs when running 100LL fuel. Another reason to find a grass airport where you do not have to wait for takeoff behind a bunch of IFR departures.

"I haven't had any plug fouling problems yet. Don't know if its the leaning, the Marvel Mystery Oil, or the sacred Paul Poberezy talisman on the altar in my hangar." I vote for the statue of "Pope" Paul.

Best of luck,

Wes
N78PS[/QUOTE]

Hiperbiper
11-16-2012, 10:30 PM
"Now; without touching the mixture knob, try and advance the throttle. The motor will die. What you have just found is the mixture knob DOES control the fuel that is availible to ALL the jets in the carb/fuel servo including the idle circuit."

You are incorrect in your understanding of how the carburetor idle circuit works. What you example has done is to shut down the mid-range circuit, then supply more air than the idle circuit can provide fuel for. The mixture downstream of the carburetor is now too lean to support combustion so the engine gets quiet. You can kill the engine by providing too much air or too much fuel. The example provided too much air for the amount of fuel that the idle circuit can provide.

Strombergs - My reccollection is that the small engine carbs in Champs and Cubs do not have a mixture control. So you cannot lean when taxiing making the distance to the runway the largest factor in the build up of lead in the plugs when running 100LL fuel. Another reason to find a grass airport where you do not have to wait for takeoff behind a bunch of IFR departures.

"I haven't had any plug fouling problems yet. Don't know if its the leaning, the Marvel Mystery Oil, or the sacred Paul Poberezy talisman on the altar in my hangar." I vote for the statue of "Pope" Paul.

Best of luck,

Wes
N78PS

OK, I should maybe quit putting kits in the MS -3 and -4 carbs 'cause I don't understand how they work.

What's a mid-range jet? Cars have 'em.

Airplane carbs have idle, main's and (some) accelerator pumps to help with the idle-to-higher RPM range. The exception is the carbs from the older airplanes and those are not germain to the disscusion here.
Again; the OP posted this tripe from an FAAST guy that stated you can't lean the motor at idle. All I wish to opine is the carb bowl is a closed chamber; the jets (idle, mid-idle,hi-mid, semi-full or full throttle) draw their fuel from the bowl. The fuel exiting must be replaced by fuel entering. The mixture control controls the mixture of ALL the jets thus...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BYm0HnLGRU&feature=related


This is how it works. Since the 1950's. Like the mags, the airplane carb is quite simple.


Chris

Cary
01-17-2013, 07:01 PM
I don't pretend to be a mechanic, and what I know about carburetors is pretty limited, but I've been flying out of high elevation airports for 40 years (Laramie at 7377', Fort Collins/Loveland at 5000', Greeley at 4700' are my "most used" airports). If you don't lean aggressively on the ground, and if you have a relatively longish taxi distance, you can almost count on fouling plugs fairly often. You can even foul the plugs in a longish idle/taxi at much lower elevations--I failed to lean sufficiently for the long taxi and idling at OSH 2 years ago, and fouled my plugs (Lycoming O-360), and that's only at 800', probably around 3000' DA that day. So my practice is to start the engine, then as soon as it's running smoothly (like 2 seconds), pull the mixture knob way out. That results in EGTs of 900-1000 degrees at 1000-1100 rpm, and that means no fouling.

Then when you're ready to start your run-up, push the mixture back in and do any pre-run-up leaning that may be necessary due to higher density altitude--or leave it full rich at low density altitudes.

You can't hurt the engine by aggressively leaning at low rpms. BTW, working for the FAA doesn't guarantee expertise, especially if the topic is way outside that particular FAA employee's area of knowledge.

Cary

raytoews
01-23-2013, 10:10 PM
I have always.been told.the.carb is set up.for max fuel like limp in on fuel injected cars.
It is harder to damage.an engine with too much fuel than to little.
The issue I have had with common practise is starting an engine.
Crank for 10 seconds then prime. Get the air and oil flowing spark
plugs snapping then get the fuel in and start.
Then lean so hard the engine won't run when you advance the throttle.
My opinion based on everything I have ever read and seen.
Ray

FlyingRon
01-24-2013, 08:22 AM
2751

Cary
01-24-2013, 01:20 PM
The issue I have had with common practise is starting an engine.
Crank for 10 seconds then prime. Get the air and oil flowing spark
plugs snapping then get the fuel in and start.Can't agree with that--in fact, most of the time, my engine starts much sooner than in 10 seconds, using the standard POH type of start. The whole idea is to have the appropriate mix of air and fuel, and when that occurs, the engine will start. There is no perfect method which works every single time, but generally speaking priming the appropriate number of strokes, then cranking with the throttle cracked open a little, and she starts. I've found that with my airplane, the "appropriate number" is 3 when cold, most of the time. Yesterday after sitting in a cold wind for 3 1/2 hours after shut down, it took 4. On a warm day, it might take 2. So there's no perfect method. But I wouldn't crank and then prime under most circumstances.

Cary

raytoews
01-25-2013, 03:23 PM
My reason for cranking first is primarily to do with oil flow.
After an engine sits for a few hours/days/weeks ALL the oil drains down out of the bearings leaving them pretty much metal to metal.
When the oil pump starts to turn the first thing to get oil is the main bearings, followed by the rods and lastly the cam. These are all pressure bearings and require a constant flow of oil to function.
So when you prime first and then crank, the engine can fire on the first compression event.
This bearing has not received any oil yet so the force of explosion hits the rod bearing and the mains when they are metal on metal.
The force on the bearings is considerably less from compression than from explosion.
It may take 3 to 5 seconds before the bearings all have oil let alone the poor old cam up there jamming down on the valve springs.
The lobes of the cam rely on splash from the bearings to get oil, it's not like cams ever wear out eh?

Of course you can avoid this by adding a preoiler.

Cat does this, the starter button starts the preoiler and when oil pressure is high enough it engages the starter and away it goes.

Or you can just crank the engine for a a few seconds, get the oil moving, get some fresh air flowing thru the engine, spark plug are snapping clearing off any moisture, then throw in the fuel. Your engine will love you for it.

You can hear it when you crank the engine, after about 5 seconds you can hear it cranking faster as the oil begins to flow.

Starting an engine is when most of the wear occurs, never shut it down and it will run forever.

The auto industry could learn from this but customers wouldn't like it because that would be a (bad) starting car.

melndav
01-25-2013, 06:47 PM
Most of the Stromberg carbs as use on Cubs, Champs, have a back suction mixture control. When you move the control in the cockpit (if you have one) a low pressure is introduced into the float bowl through one of a number of increasingly larger holes in a disc attached to the mixture control arm. This is supposed to reduce the amount of fuel flow by way of the vacuum that is created on top of the fuel. Since the engine has to be running to create the this vacuum, it will not shut the engine off like a modern mixture which limits the fuel coming into the carb and can cut it off all together. They never seemed to work very well so most folks just wire them full rich, although I understand they do work better at higher elevation airports.

pacerpilot
01-25-2013, 09:51 PM
Not with a Stromberg. Mine won't kill the engine at idle, and, in fact, you can't even tell that the mixture is out until the RPM goes past a thousand or so. A lot of Strombergs just have the mixture control wired full rich.

But I do lean my carb when taxiing...pull it out all the way, in fact. I figure it's gotta be doing *something*, when I'm running 100LL.

I haven't had any plug fouling problems yet. Don't know if its the leaning, the Marvel Mystery Oil, or the sacred Paul Poberezy talisman on the altar in my hangar.

Ron Wanttaja

Marvel Mystery Oil is good stuff!

Cary
01-26-2013, 11:40 AM
Ray--interesting. I'll never know so much that I can't learn more. I'll ask my IA what he thinks, though. But anything I can do to preserve that expensive hunk of aluminum out front, I'm willing to do! :)

Cary