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Anyone here have any thoughts on the whole LOP concept?
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Flying with the throttle wide open and reducing power by leaning out the mixture well past peak EGT is actually a very old procedure. Virtually all of the old piston engine airliners were flown this way.
First off, a brief lesson for any newbies.
The mixture of an airplane engine is controled manually by the pilot. On airplanes with a constant speed propeller the way you know if the mixture is correct is by watching the Exaust Gas Temp guage. When the perfect mixture ratio is achived the EGT will be hotest. This is known a peak EGT.
Now running at peak EGT will really heat up the engine. Most pilots richen the mixture to add more fuel. This extra fuel dose not burn because there isn't enough air for it. Instead it absorbes some of the heat from the engine and carries it away.
What you can also do is lean out the mixture
past peak EGT. This is starving the engine for fuel. Now instead of extra fuel to carry away the heat, you have extra
air to accomplish the same thing. (air is a heck of a lt cheaper than 100LL). By defintion "lean of peak" is cooler than peak EGT.
The drawback of running LOP is that power drops of dramaticly as you go past peak. If you don't monitor this carefully you will either be going really slow, or (if you're a shade too rich) really abusing your engine.
Now the main reason that this procedure was forgotten was due to instumenation. The old DC-4s and Connies had flight enginiers to monitor a multitude of guages. The Cessnas and Bonanzas useually only have an already busy pilot, and a single EGT guage. So pilots could only aproximatly guess wether they were at the right mixture setting. Since everyone wanted to be cautious they ran rich. This let them go fast and kept their engines cool.
Now that the new multi bar engine monitors have become so cheap. Pilots can get much better info about what is going on inside their engine. Now you can adjust your mixture at precisely the right setting for your flight.
The other problem with running LOP is that most carburated and many fuel injected engines have very poor matching of airflow from diffrent cylinders. Old radials useuall had really good distribution. This means that each cylinder is reaching peak EGT at diffrent times. When this happens, vibration gets pretty bad. Most engines with fixed pitch props are leaned out till they start vibrating, then you richen up a little.
GAMI has come out with a line of fuel injectors that fixes this by precisely matching fuel flow to each cylinder with the correct airflow.
A computerized graphic engine monitor, GAMIjectors, and LASAR ignition will be required equipment on any plane I own in the future.
Now that you can closely monitor your engine and it won't vibrate like crazy, it is possible to cruise at 50-100 deg LOP without destroying your engine or sacrificing speed.
Look at the mixture curve chart in the "mixture magic" article (I couldn't figure out how to post it). It explaines this pretty well.