Matt13C
Well-Known Member
Few questions about how the oil temp and pressure gages work in a 172P. First an overview of the reasons for the questions.
Yesterday, after doing the complete preflight, everything looked good, including 7 quarts of oil, as the plane should have.
I get in, start it up, 1000 rpms, look at the oil pressure and temp gauges and they are way off. Oil temp has not moved, still full cold reading and pressure is beyond the green, just between the red line and end of the green. I let it run for a few minutes, then I run it up to 1500 rpm. The temp gauge still has not moved, by this point it is normally close to center of the green and the pressure gauge is pegged at full pressure, 115 psi. At this point I shut it down and call an instructor over.
Now, I fly this plane all the time and just flew it on Sunday, nobody has flown it since, I put the oil in last time and everything was perfect for the entire 2.4 I flew it. The temp gauge always comes up a bit then slowly works its way to just to the right of straight up. The pressure gauge always reads a bit high, even has a sticker indicating a 20 high reading above it, but at 1000 rpms, it was always inside the green, even at full power it was just slightly above the green, never spiked.
The instructor, without even starting it up says, its fine, it is just from the heat. I reply that it was just as hot on Sunday and the gauges didnt read near this off. Then he says the sending unit on the airplane is faulty and it always reads high. I dont know anything about how a sending unit works so I cant respond to that, but I say I fly it all the time and I am 100% certain it has never read this high even all through last summer, can you please start it up and tell me what you see. He does, sees the same indications and again says it is fine, says it is just reading high. This time upon shut down the oil pressure gauge is still showing nearly 30 psi.
I didnt fly, I was not comfortable with the indications, the instructor said fine, but I could see he was a bit annoyed.
While I am comfortable in my no go decision I am also curious about what the problem could be. Wouldnt thin oil cause less pressure since it flows easier? And being that it was 90 out yesterday, the temp should have moved at least a little upon start up and certainly after running a few minutes and running it up to 1500 rpms. Also, if the pressure stayed at 30 after shut down, when there is nothing providing pressure, my limited knowledge on the subject might be misleading me here, but doesnt the engine need to be turning to pressurize the system? When it shuts down, should the pressure normalize?
If you have made it this far thanks and sorry for the long winded post. I have never experience this before and while I know low oil pressure is a bad thing I feel that high, while not as bad, if out of the ordinary should be checked before taking the plane flying.
Any input welcome.
Thanks
Yesterday, after doing the complete preflight, everything looked good, including 7 quarts of oil, as the plane should have.
I get in, start it up, 1000 rpms, look at the oil pressure and temp gauges and they are way off. Oil temp has not moved, still full cold reading and pressure is beyond the green, just between the red line and end of the green. I let it run for a few minutes, then I run it up to 1500 rpm. The temp gauge still has not moved, by this point it is normally close to center of the green and the pressure gauge is pegged at full pressure, 115 psi. At this point I shut it down and call an instructor over.
Now, I fly this plane all the time and just flew it on Sunday, nobody has flown it since, I put the oil in last time and everything was perfect for the entire 2.4 I flew it. The temp gauge always comes up a bit then slowly works its way to just to the right of straight up. The pressure gauge always reads a bit high, even has a sticker indicating a 20 high reading above it, but at 1000 rpms, it was always inside the green, even at full power it was just slightly above the green, never spiked.
The instructor, without even starting it up says, its fine, it is just from the heat. I reply that it was just as hot on Sunday and the gauges didnt read near this off. Then he says the sending unit on the airplane is faulty and it always reads high. I dont know anything about how a sending unit works so I cant respond to that, but I say I fly it all the time and I am 100% certain it has never read this high even all through last summer, can you please start it up and tell me what you see. He does, sees the same indications and again says it is fine, says it is just reading high. This time upon shut down the oil pressure gauge is still showing nearly 30 psi.
I didnt fly, I was not comfortable with the indications, the instructor said fine, but I could see he was a bit annoyed.
While I am comfortable in my no go decision I am also curious about what the problem could be. Wouldnt thin oil cause less pressure since it flows easier? And being that it was 90 out yesterday, the temp should have moved at least a little upon start up and certainly after running a few minutes and running it up to 1500 rpms. Also, if the pressure stayed at 30 after shut down, when there is nothing providing pressure, my limited knowledge on the subject might be misleading me here, but doesnt the engine need to be turning to pressurize the system? When it shuts down, should the pressure normalize?
If you have made it this far thanks and sorry for the long winded post. I have never experience this before and while I know low oil pressure is a bad thing I feel that high, while not as bad, if out of the ordinary should be checked before taking the plane flying.
Any input welcome.
Thanks