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Posted

I haven’t seen this before in my other planes. Not sure if it’s normal or indicative of a problem. 
the person who owned it prior to me flew pretty rich of peak, as I can tell from the year or so of uncleared belly....

the left exhaust does not look at all like this, it’s only the right. 
anyone know what this is?

it’s pretty thick inside the exhaust, I’d say close to 1/8” and difficult to scrape off but will with a screwdriver or blade. 

76E336E8-9C7B-48AA-81BE-253181CAA478.jpeg

0E4707B1-ADC2-4D64-AC5C-3B04C95887E9.jpeg

DDC20BEF-6E63-44A5-BD08-EE18789DF817.jpeg

Posted

It has had the sb done, right around the same time as a top, which was about 150 hours ago. 450 total time. 
I put more time than the total on my first acclaim and didn’t have this much buildup. 
I haven’t pulled any plugs yet, due for an annual in two weeks.  
it runs well, all temps, and egts are where you would want them. 
It does not have gami’s but runs lop well without them. 
I did not do a prebuy. 
Will be bringing to Cole Aviation for the annual. 

Posted
15 minutes ago, Schllc said:

It has had the sb done, right around the same time as a top, which was about 150 hours ago. 450 total time. 
I put more time than the total on my first acclaim and didn’t have this much buildup. 
I haven’t pulled any plugs yet, due for an annual in two weeks.  
it runs well, all temps, and egts are where you would want them. 
It does not have gami’s but runs lop well without them. 
I did not do a prebuy. 
Will be bringing to Cole Aviation for the annual. 

But I don’t fly rop either...

Posted

Let’s invite @M20Doc  the conversation…  (hard exhaust build up in one pipe of an Acclaim’s exhaust, clean on the other pipe…)

Its possible that something turbo related may be getting deposited inside the pipe…  or something from one of the three cylinders on that side…

Any idea how many hours are on the turbo’s since reseal or total hours?

Do the lower spark plugs show anything collecting in the bottom?

Oil typically exits without burning completely…

 

Is that a similar discoloration on the outside of the pipe?

Got pics of the other pipe, inside and out?

 

PP guesses only, not a mechanic…

Best regards,

-a-

 

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I think Mike Busch, in discussing valve sticking, actually describes the condition. @thinwing is probably correct in his lead bromate. About 20:00 in, he discusses condensation onto cooler parts. The exhaust exit would definitely be cool enough for the gaseous components to condense and form deposits.

 

Posted
On 10/17/2021 at 1:48 PM, Schllc said:

I haven’t seen this before in my other planes. Not sure if it’s normal or indicative of a problem. 
the person who owned it prior to me flew pretty rich of peak, as I can tell from the year or so of uncleared belly....

the left exhaust does not look at all like this, it’s only the right. 
anyone know what this is?

it’s pretty thick inside the exhaust, I’d say close to 1/8” and difficult to scrape off but will with a screwdriver or blade. 

76E336E8-9C7B-48AA-81BE-253181CAA478.jpeg

0E4707B1-ADC2-4D64-AC5C-3B04C95887E9.jpeg

DDC20BEF-6E63-44A5-BD08-EE18789DF817.jpeg

Is this SB being adhered to closely?

https://mooney.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/SBM20-312.pdf

Posted
1 hour ago, LANCECASPER said:

No, this SB isn’t relevant. 
There are two SB’s that address this issue.
The one you have referred to requires the recurring inspection, and the other is the rerouting of the breather tube. 
https://mooney.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/SBM20-319.pdf
My plane has the latter which eliminates the need for the inspections. 

After speaking to a few well respected experts, I’m confident it’s merely the result of very ROP flight.  It’s in annual now with Cole Aviation so we will confirm soon enough. 

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
On 10/27/2021 at 4:48 PM, ArtVandelay said:

I thought lead compound deposits were white?

bromine compounds yield reddish to brownish  colored deposit depending on phase...looking at his pic and color of the deposits made me think of Busch podcast.

Edited by thinwing
clarity
Posted

The deposit looks like it is fighting to stay there…

in one place the deposit gets erased… as if it is getting washed out…

in other places it is building up thicker…

It is probably a very specific condition that allows it to build up like that… 

The other pipe is clean?

 

If it is lead compounds because you want to run extra rich…. Verify the chemistry to make sure it isn’t something else…

See Philip_g’s comment above…

NA PP thoughts only, not turbo driven…

Best regards,

-a-

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted
On 10/29/2021 at 11:21 PM, Schllc said:

After speaking to a few well respected experts, I’m confident it’s merely the result of very ROP flight.  It’s in annual now with Cole Aviation so we will confirm soon enough. 

Any outcome on this? The reason I ask is that i just bought 31-0102 late last week, so I am curious if this is something I'll be dealing with down the road.

Posted
3 hours ago, LANCECASPER said:

i just bought 31-0102 late last week

Congratulations.  I have a little of the same on the right exhaust -never really noticed it.  The right pipe is much longer and extends outboard more than the left, so maybe the exhaust hitting the pipe that is cooled in the airflow more is at work here?

-dan

Posted
8 hours ago, LANCECASPER said:

Any outcome on this? The reason I ask is that i just bought 31-0102 late last week, so I am curious if this is something I'll be dealing with down the road.

It appears to be from a combination of not doing the SB to reroute the breather tube earlier and running excessively rich.  
While I have less than 1000 hours experience with the tsio550 over four engines, I am pretty convinced that these engines do not endure well over time while being run ROP. 
Both issues I have had with turbos were right after purchase, and both owners told me they had run exclusively ROP.  
I prefer to run LOP and the three previous tsio550’s I owned I flew LOP exclusively and the owners, all of who I still speak to also fly LOP, and none of them have had any turbo issues so far.
Admittedly, it’s a small sample, but I’m going to fly the new one the same way, until I have evidence to the contrary. 

Posted (edited)
53 minutes ago, Schllc said:

It appears to be from a combination of not doing the SB to reroute the breather tube earlier and running excessively rich.  
While I have less than 1000 hours experience with the tsio550 over four engines, I am pretty convinced that these engines do not endure well over time while being run ROP. 
Both issues I have had with turbos were right after purchase, and both owners told me they had run exclusively ROP.  
I prefer to run LOP and the three previous tsio550’s I owned I flew LOP exclusively and the owners, all of who I still speak to also fly LOP, and none of them have had any turbo issues so far.
Admittedly, it’s a small sample, but I’m going to fly the new one the same way, until I have evidence to the contrary. 

All I can tell you is the sr22t fleet runs the tsio550k and they run almost exclusively LOP without issue. And often at 85% power. Neither of my turbo mooneys (360lb 520) liked lop.

 

Cirrus advocates a lop climb, even

Edited by philip_g
  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Schllc said:

It appears to be from a combination of not doing the SB to reroute the breather tube earlier and running excessively rich.  
While I have less than 1000 hours experience with the tsio550 over four engines, I am pretty convinced that these engines do not endure well over time while being run ROP. 
Both issues I have had with turbos were right after purchase, and both owners told me they had run exclusively ROP.  
I prefer to run LOP and the three previous tsio550’s I owned I flew LOP exclusively and the owners, all of who I still speak to also fly LOP, and none of them have had any turbo issues so far.
Admittedly, it’s a small sample, but I’m going to fly the new one the same way, until I have evidence to the contrary. 

Just took some photos.  Mine is similar but less noticeable than yours.  Again, left side clean as a whistle, right side with small buildup.  I run LOP/SOP except for climb.  Been flying that was for 700 hours, and this is how the exhaust has looked from day one.  The angle on the right exhaust pipe is much more perpendicular to the airflow and dumps no chalky residue on the belly.  The left side is clean in the pipe but leavs quite a bit of chalky residu on the belly.  My best guess is that the in-exhaust buildup is an accumulation of the chalky Lead stuff.  I borescope both turbos at annual, and they are both fine.  It’s just not something that keeps me up at night.

 

the crankcase breather /air-oil separator tube is on the left side, so it has nothing to do with that.

Three shots of the right and one of the left attached.

-dan

7AD91F58-A74C-4FE2-9B01-81B870C7FDB9.jpeg

6AD430DA-652D-4DF2-AFF3-8F64A101D32B.jpeg

5D9402D2-7687-4363-85AD-5B0B488DB845.jpeg

C38577CE-B6FC-4393-96DA-80BACB61A56C.jpeg

Edited by exM20K
Posted
1 hour ago, exM20K said:

Just took some photos.  Mine is similar but less noticeable than yours.  Again, left side clean as a whistle, right side with small buildup.  I run LOP/SOP except for climb.  Been flying that was for 700 hours, and this is how the exhaust has looked from day one.  The angle on the right exhaust pipe is much more perpendicular to the airflow and dumps no chalky residue on the belly.  The left side is clean in the pipe but leavs quite a bit of chalky residu on the belly.  My best guess is that the in-exhaust buildup is an accumulation of the chalky Lead stuff.  I borescope both turbos at annual, and they are both fine.  It’s just not something that keeps me up at night.

 

the crankcase breather /air-oil separator tube is on the left side, so it has nothing to do with that.

Three shots of the right and one of the left attached.

-dan

7AD91F58-A74C-4FE2-9B01-81B870C7FDB9.jpeg

6AD430DA-652D-4DF2-AFF3-8F64A101D32B.jpeg

5D9402D2-7687-4363-85AD-5B0B488DB845.jpeg

C38577CE-B6FC-4393-96DA-80BACB61A56C.jpeg

I was told the transition tube was on the right side, not the left. I knew the breather is on the left. 
Ill confirm this with Cole tomorrow. 
that’s interesting that we both have the build up on the right. 
the owner before me accumulated all of that buildup in the last 12 months. 

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