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Posted

Question for the hive mind. I noticed oil on both cowl flaps this morning during pre-flight. This picture is from the cowl flap below the exhaust. The other one has a similar amount of oil. The engine can hold 8 quarts of oil, and I noticed it'll loose 3/4 of a quart every 3 hours or so until it gets to ~6 1/4 quarts and from there oil consumption is very low. I flew it an hour at the 6 1/4 qts level and didn't notice any consumption during that hour (I waited until next day for the oil to cool to measure the level). I have heard you should run these engines at 7 qts, but 6 1/4 seems a low place for the level to stabilize.

I am still in the break-in period with ~30 hours total tach time on the engine.

Any ideas what this is from? Is it normal? I couldn't think where the oil would be coming from under the exhaust. On the other side there are several tubes just inside the engine cover above the cowl flap and IIRC one of them can vent oil.

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Posted
11 minutes ago, gevertex said:

Question for the hive mind. I noticed oil on both cowl flaps this morning during pre-flight. This picture is from the cowl flap below the exhaust. The other one has a similar amount of oil. The engine can hold 8 quarts of oil, and I noticed it'll loose 3/4 of a quart every 3 hours or so until it gets to ~6 1/4 quarts and from there oil consumption is very low. I flew it an hour at the 6 1/4 qts level and didn't notice any consumption during that hour (I waited until next day for the oil to cool to measure the level). I have heard you should run these engines at 7 qts, but 6 1/4 seems a low place for the level to stabilize.

I am still in the break-in period with ~30 hours total tach time on the engine.

Any ideas what this is from? Is it normal? I couldn't think where the oil would be coming from under the exhaust. On the other side there are several tubes just inside the engine cover above the cowl flap and IIRC one of them can vent oil.

IMG_2323.jpg

I use Savvy for maintenance guidance, and they recommend not adding oil until it is at 4qt, and then only add 2qt to get it to 6. I'm doing that without any noticeable effect on oil pressure.

  • Like 2
Posted

In the O-360 and IO-360 engines anything above about six quarts rises above the bottom of the crankcase and is within the windage of the crankshaft, where it can get aerated and go out the crank vent.    However, that should be going on the belly after the vent tube, not on your cowl flaps.    If the dipstick isn't secure or the dipstick tube is leaking at the bottom a bit, this could be where that oil is coming from.   It might be easy to see with the cowl off, or maybe by shining a light down the oil hatch or up from the right side cowl flap.   It's an easy fix if that's where it's coming from.
 

Posted
19 hours ago, redbaron1982 said:

I use Savvy for maintenance guidance, and they recommend not adding oil until it is at 4qt, and then only add 2qt to get it to 6. I'm doing that without any noticeable effect on oil pressure.

I've taken the approach of making sure I am above 6 before takeoff. I don't check the oil after the flight, only before the next flight.

Posted
19 hours ago, EricJ said:

In the O-360 and IO-360 engines anything above about six quarts rises above the bottom of the crankcase and is within the windage of the crankshaft, where it can get aerated and go out the crank vent.    However, that should be going on the belly after the vent tube, not on your cowl flaps.    If the dipstick isn't secure or the dipstick tube is leaking at the bottom a bit, this could be where that oil is coming from.   It might be easy to see with the cowl off, or maybe by shining a light down the oil hatch or up from the right side cowl flap.   It's an easy fix if that's where it's coming from.
 

So then this is possibly a leak somewhere in the engine when the plane is at rest, not something happening while running? The other cowl flap looks the same. I wonder how a localized leak would cover both cowl flaps (just curious).

Posted
39 minutes ago, gevertex said:

So then this is possibly a leak somewhere in the engine when the plane is at rest, not something happening while running? The other cowl flap looks the same. I wonder how a localized leak would cover both cowl flaps (just curious).

Even if it is the oil filler tube leaking, oil gets splashed up there and leaks primarily during engine operation.   Any oil leaking or pooled or adhering to the engine will get stirred up and blown around during operation, and anything blown around inside the cowl winds up on the cowl flaps on the way out.   

Drips that leak at rest usually just drip from the leak or where it gets pooled.

  • Like 2
Posted
On 8/12/2023 at 7:42 PM, EricJ said:

In the O-360 and IO-360 engines anything above about six quarts rises above the bottom of the crankcase and is within the windage of the crankshaft, where it can get aerated and go out the crank vent.   

This all has to do with minimum oil certification in the regs.  Somebody will come along and correct but essentially if you have 8 max you get 4 min or something to the effect.  The reality is 6 which would mean something like 2 min which is unachievable.  Hence the published 8 which everyone just uses 6 for. 

Posted
9 minutes ago, M20F said:

This all has to do with minimum oil certification in the regs.  Somebody will come along and correct but essentially if you have 8 max you get 4 min or something to the effect.  The reality is 6 which would mean something like 2 min which is unachievable.  Hence the published 8 which everyone just uses 6 for. 

It has to be able to run a full tank through at max allowed consumption, or something along those lines.   So, for example, at 1qt/hour (or whatever the max allowed is) and six hours of fuel you'd need to have enough capacity to burn six quarts and still have the minimum allowable oil remaining.   This is how it was explained by the Lycoming guy at an IA seminar a few years ago, anyway.    So even though oil above 6qts can get blown overboard in many engines, it's there to comply with a reg as you suggest.

The fact that many can put in 7 quarts or so and not just blow it overboard seems to be a desirable feature, and I don't know why some do and some don't.

Posted

I know others have posted about it, but I was shocked that it actually worked. I took my ignition key to ACE Hardware and they made me two copies in ~5 minutes for $8. Lowes didn't have the blanks. I have the key that looks like a filing cabinet key. Cheapest part on this thing :D.

Posted
1 hour ago, gevertex said:

I know others have posted about it, but I was shocked that it actually worked. I took my ignition key to ACE Hardware and they made me two copies in ~5 minutes for $8. Lowes didn't have the blanks. I have the key that looks like a filing cabinet key. Cheapest part on this thing :D.

I did copies for mine in Lowe's... never thought on getting much fancier than that for a key.

Posted

On a previous plane I removed the door lock and luggage lock and had them rekeyed to match the ignition key.

They were all the same style as the common office file cabinet.

My Cessna is a single-key machine too.  Such a pleasure to never again put the wrong key in the ignition.   

Posted

Now that I think about it..... I wonder if I can get them both rekeyed so I have only a single key for both planes...

  • Like 2
Posted (edited)

Flew to breakfast Saturday and noticed some light streaking on both blades of the prop after the flight. The prop has roughly 30 hours since new and is about a year old. I've never seen streaking before. I took off the spinner to take a look and get some pictures. I wanted to get your thoughts. I ran up the airplane twice and cycled the prop 5 times each time per McCauley's recommendation in Service Letter 1998-24 and did see some very light streaking afterward on one blade, barely noticeable. 

I cleaned the spinner inside and out before putting it back together.

Thoughts?

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Edited by gevertex
Clarity
Posted

Without going back over the thread, how long did the prop sit?

We noticed a bit of streaking on the back of one blade during my transition training.  Wiped it off before flying home, and haven't seen it come back  in over 100 hours.

Posted
1 hour ago, Pinecone said:

Without going back over the thread, how long did the prop sit?

We noticed a bit of streaking on the back of one blade during my transition training.  Wiped it off before flying home, and haven't seen it come back  in over 100 hours.

I’ve been flying it about 2x a week since I got the avionics done. Prop streaking started well after that. Prop is just about new being built in Q2 2022

Posted
23 minutes ago, gevertex said:

I’ve been flying it about 2x a week since I got the avionics done. Prop streaking started well after that. Prop is just about new being built in Q2 2022

Probably just things getting seated fully and wearing in.

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