Chris Strube Posted February 23, 2023 Report Posted February 23, 2023 1965 M20E turbo. I'm removing my "through the window" OAT probe, and have installed an AV-30. Where is the best place for an electronic OAT probe? Quote
Igor_U Posted February 23, 2023 Report Posted February 23, 2023 Inboard inspection panel under (right) the wing. My understanding is that's the factory setup. 1 Quote
Ragsf15e Posted February 23, 2023 Report Posted February 23, 2023 36 minutes ago, Chris Strube said: 1965 M20E turbo. I'm removing my "through the window" OAT probe, and have installed an AV-30. Where is the best place for an electronic OAT probe? Mine is in the left wing, but yeah, out under the wing so it’s away from the engine, propwash and out of the sun. Quote
Nippernaper Posted February 27, 2023 Report Posted February 27, 2023 Under the wing works well. I have seen some in the NACA inlet on the copilots side of the fuselage (J models). When I upgraded the panel on my J, avionics shop installed the OAT probe on the belly near the tail. It's hard to believe, but the exhaust raised the temperature of the probe by tens of degrees f. Had them relocate it to the factory position in the wing.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Hank Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 On 2/27/2023 at 8:00 AM, Nippernaper said: I have seen some in the NACA inlet on the copilots side of the fuselage (J models). That's where it is on my C. 1 Quote
ArtVandelay Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 Even my JPI probe mounted in pilot NACA duct runs about 10° warmer, the JPI allows adjustments but not 10°. My G3X probe replaced the factory one in the wing. Quote
flyboy0681 Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 Interesting subject. I have a GI 275 ADI and the OAT probe is mounted in the NACA scoop. Reading responses on the subject led me to believe that there would be a huge difference in temperature readings, which worried me because I love the wind speed and direction display that the -275 affords me. Now here's the rub, when landing I always compare the towers (or AWOS) wind speed and direction and the -275 agrees exactly with what is reported, even when the sun is shining on the probe. If the OAT was inaccurate, I would expect the display to be way off, but it isn't. Maybe OAT isn't a factor in the air data computer calculation? Quote
ArtVandelay Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 Interesting subject. I have a GI 275 ADI and the OAT probe is mounted in the NACA scoop. Reading responses on the subject led me to believe that there would be a huge difference in temperature readings, which worried me because I love the wind speed and direction display that the -275 affords me. Now here's the rub, when landing I always compare the towers (or AWOS) wind speed and direction and the -275 agrees exactly with what is reported, even when the sun is shining on the probe. If the OAT was inaccurate, I would expect the display to be way off, but it isn't. Maybe OAT isn't a factor in the air data computer calculation?When landing your engine exhaust output is minimal, try checking it in cruise and comparing to forecasted temperatures. Quote
flyboy0681 Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 1 minute ago, ArtVandelay said: When landing your engine exhaust output is minimal, try checking it in cruise and comparing to forecasted temperatures. I actually have. I feed the GTN 750 Winds/TAS utility with the required data (ie, CAS, Baro) using the temp from the trusty old factory OAT and the calculated wind/speed is very close to that of the GI 275. It's not always identical due to difficulty getting an accurate reading from the old pointer. Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 If you are an IFR pilot, you can check the temperature when the ice forms. It should be zero C. It’s the only temperature that really matters. 1 Quote
McMooney Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 Mine's in the air inlet scoop on the copilots side of the plane, m20e Quote
Tom 4536 Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 1 hour ago, McMooney said: Mine's in the air inlet scoop on the copilots side of the plane, m20e On my 231 I have one AOT probe where yours is and one under the wing. On the ground they both read identical values; cruising they are within one degree of each other. Quote
flyboy0681 Posted April 19, 2023 Report Posted April 19, 2023 1 hour ago, Tom 4536 said: On my 231 I have one AOT probe where yours is and one under the wing. On the ground they both read identical values; cruising they are within one degree of each other. Sounds about right. Quote
0TreeLemur Posted April 19, 2023 Report Posted April 19, 2023 My C had two: one in the passenger side NACA duct, and a second on the first inboard inspection panel outboard on the pilot's side. The one in the NACA duct read a few degrees warmer than the one under the wing.. My J has it on the second inspection panel outboard on the pilot's side. Quote
BDPetersen Posted April 19, 2023 Report Posted April 19, 2023 FWW I have probes in both NACA scoops, one for G5, one for JPI. Both read the same. Someday maybe do the underwing experiment, but I think it’s close enough for my purposes. Quote
M20F Posted April 19, 2023 Report Posted April 19, 2023 Here is a trick I have found to be very effective. Put the OAT probe near the exhaust and bingo you never have to worry about icing. I am always a comfortable 200 degrees and zero concerns about icing up. 1 4 Quote
NicoN Posted June 12, 2023 Report Posted June 12, 2023 @ArtVandelay We also have the factory probe under the right wing, while the JPI probe lives in this NACA inlet. It is ~6° C higher inflight than the fctory gauge. In the hangar they read the same Quote
flyboy0681 Posted June 12, 2023 Report Posted June 12, 2023 24 minutes ago, NicoN said: @ArtVandelay We also have the factory probe under the right wing, while the JPI probe lives in this NACA inlet. It is ~6° C higher inflight than the fctory gauge. In the hangar they read the same Interestingly, my JPI probe and Garmin are two degrees off when I take a reading in a closed hangar with static air with no sunlight. When I quizzed others on MS about that, the response fro more than once was that the Garmin accounts for ram rise in its design. Even when I adjust the JPI display to match the Garmin, they eventually don’t agree in flight. Quote
EricJ Posted June 12, 2023 Report Posted June 12, 2023 39 minutes ago, flyboy0681 said: Interestingly, my JPI probe and Garmin are two degrees off when I take a reading in a closed hangar with static air with no sunlight. When I quizzed others on MS about that, the response fro more than once was that the Garmin accounts for ram rise in its design. Even when I adjust the JPI display to match the Garmin, they eventually don’t agree in flight. That might also be within measurement error tolerance of the probes. Ram rise should be included in Total Air Temperature, but not OAT. Ram rise is going to be negligible on our airplanes, anyway. Quote
PT20J Posted June 14, 2023 Report Posted June 14, 2023 I found a formula for ram air temperature rise in deg C = [TAS(knots) / 87]^2. I don't know if this is accurate or not. But, it predicts a temperature rise of 1 deg C at 100 KTAS, 3 deg at 150 KTAS and 5 deg at 200 KTAS which seems reasonable. Garmin corrects the measured ram temperature at the probe to OAT by some unpublished formula (maybe this one) for some instruments (I know it does it for the G3X -- I haven't checked others). Quote
flyboy0681 Posted June 14, 2023 Report Posted June 14, 2023 38 minutes ago, PT20J said: I found a formula for ram air temperature rise in deg C = [TAS(knots) / 87]^2. I don't know if this is accurate or not. But, it predicts a temperature rise of 1 deg C at 100 KTAS, 3 deg at 150 KTAS and 5 deg at 200 KTAS which seems reasonable. Garmin corrects the measured ram temperature at the probe to OAT by some unpublished formula (maybe this one) for some instruments (I know it does it for the G3X -- I haven't checked others). 3 degrees at 150kts is not insignificant. Quote
JeffMirs Posted December 13, 2023 Report Posted December 13, 2023 On 2/23/2023 at 1:38 PM, Igor_U said: Inboard inspection panel under (right) the wing. My understanding is that's the factory setup. Left wing better as it won't be influenced by exhaust gases which are also on the right side. Agree on using the existing hole as guide in an inspection panel. 1 Quote
PT20J Posted December 16, 2023 Report Posted December 16, 2023 Here’s where the factory put it under the right wing on my M20J. Quote
Aerodon Posted December 17, 2023 Report Posted December 17, 2023 I have a bunch of 20' JPI thermocouple wires that are ideal for OAT probes - Type K so can be used for other brands too. Send me a PM. Aerodon Quote
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