The object of running
in an engine, is to get the engine to the point where all the rubbing surfaces are
perfectly mated to each other at all temperatures likely to be attained,
while causing as little wear to the engine as possible in the process. The
benefits of doing this properly are twofold; the engine would be a 'better'
engine throughout it's life, and that life whould also be extended. A good tip is
to use an old glowplug when first running in an engine, as often minute pieces
of metal from the running in process or swarf left from manufacturing can
destroy a glowplug in seconds.
The method used to achieve this
is simple. Run the engine very rich and lightly loaded at first and gradually
increase the amount of work the engine is allowed to do, at the same time
gradually increasing the temperature that the engine is allowed to attain, by
judicious use of the main needle valve. This gradual process is spread over
approximately the first half hour of the engine's life when it
should be ready for its first full speed run. During all running of new engines,
the setting should be on the rich side of peak power.
All running-in
during the first tankfulls is done with the
throttle fully open.
Ringed Motors
Start by using one of the
smaller propellers recommended by the manufacturer and a minimum of 20% of oil in the straight or low nitro fuel.
When using synthetic oil, addition of castor for the first run(s) is
recommended by most manufacturers and engine authorities.
Run the first tankful
absolutely soggy-rich, keeping the glow-plug lead attached if necessary to keep
the engine running. Keep all runs of short duration of one-half to one minute, with a few minutes cooling
down time between each.
The number of heat cycles makes the metal "set" and speeds up the
final fit of the components. The rich mixture and the short runs prevent
the temperature from rising too much. Debris that forms will be washed
away by the excess fuel and oil.
For the next few runs set the
main fuel needle to give a very fast fourstroke with just the occasional hint of
two-stroking. Allow engine to run for 30 seconds and then stop for a two munute cooling period,
Start again for 30 seconds then allow to cool again. Gradually increase the
length of the full throttle runs, unless the engine shows a tendency to
bind, which can be heard by the labouring sound and unwillingness to maintain a
steady rpm. At the end of two tankfuls lean the engine out to the point where the engine is
on the verge of two-stroking and
four-stroking and go fly, reducing throttle from time to time to allow the
engine to cool a bit. Keep this up for about four litres of fuel. By
now the engine should be steady running, without any tendency to sag, and can be
leaned further to the point, that max. power is achieved. Always back off the needle a
bit until a clear drop in rev's can be noticed. That is the standard flight
setting for logevity and strong running in the air. During flight, the engine
will lean out a bit, so you will be on the safe side of desaster with
this setting.
If the engine is to be used under more harsh conditions (e.g.
with a tuned pipe or high nitro fuel), then it will need some extra running-in under the short-run
procedure, using the same fuel as for it's intended use, but with extra oil
added. 25% oil is not too much for the first runs of a racing engine and will do
it a lot of good.
All this might seem a
long-winded process but it is necessary to get the best surface finish with the
least wear inside your precious engine.
The reason for everything being
done in small and gradual steps is that the rubbing surfaces have to be mated at
gradually increasing pressures and to further complicate this the shape of the
parts change as temperatures are increased. As an illustration, the cylinder and
piston are round and parallel sided when made. As the engine warms up the top
half of the cylinder gets hotter than the bottom half and so expands unevenly,
worse than this the exhaust side of the liner runs hotter than the transfer side,
then to add to the problem the front of the engine (in the airstream) runs
cooler than the rear of the engine, so you can see the liner would be anything
but perfectly round and parallel when thoroughly hot.
That is the reason, that a well run-in engine has a bit les compression
during starting than a new engine.
The piston and ring are subject
to similar stresses. The ring alters its length depending on temperature and is
also going up and down a bore which is no longer round or parallel sided and is
guided through this operation by a piston which gets hotter at its head where it
is in contact with the burning fuel mixture and therefore the diameter of the
head is bigger than the walls. The exhaust side of the piston is hotter than the
transfer side so the piston is no longer round or, as mentioned earlier,
parallel sided either. All these distortions are larger or smaller depending on
the temperature of the engine, so the running-in process has to allow the engine
to make the mating working surfaces suitable for all these varying conditions.
During
the run-in
check all screws and bolts for security and if you have to tighten any cylinder
head bolts, remember to tighten a little at a time and in diagonal rotation. You
might also find the glow-plug has been affected by small metal particles fired
at it during running-in. If you have any doubts change it and keep the old one
only for running-in only, or throw it away. It did serve it's duty.
Running in ABC engines
An 'ABC' engine is one with
special liner and piston metallurgy, e.g., the piston is aluminium (A), the
liner is brass (B), and the brass is chrome plated (C). Generally these are
performance orientated engines.
When an ABC engine is warmed up,
the top of the liner, which made of brass, will expand more than the piston which is made of
aluminium. Consequently, as the engine reaches working temperature the piston
seal would not be very satisfactory. The manufacturers have taken steps to counteract this undesirable state of affairs by making the
liner and piston the correct sizes for when the engine is hot. This means that
when cold the piston is a very tight fit at the top of the liner, to the point
where some make a light groaning noise when forced over Top Dead Centre (when
the piston is at the very top of its travel, or TDC for short).
Warning: a new ABC engine should never be turned over
slowly, especially when still lubricated by the original preserving oil that
the engine is shipped with. That will cause slight, but immediate damage to the top part of
the piston fit, because the surfaces are still rough.
Little running-in
is required with these engines, as the cylinder temperature must be raised to
full working temperature as quickly as possible to avoid excessive piston wear
due to the very tight fit at lower temperatures.
As a matter of fact, it is best to fly these engines out of the box, using a
rich setting with occasional four stroking. It is important to use an
extra 5% of oil on top of the normal mixture.
When
bench running, my usual method is to use about
5% extra castor oil in the fuel and set the engine for just below full speed
running (throttle fully open, main needle just a little bit rich), and run the
engine in short cycles of approximately 30 secs. full speed and 5 secs. at 1/3
speed, for the first 15 minutes. This keeps the cylinder temperature up and the
slow running should give time for any hot spots to cool down somewhat. For the
next 45 minutes use the engine normally but keep it just a touch rich (just 2 or
3 clicks).
After that, normal fuel can be used as per manufactureres
recommendations.
Setting the main needle
This is a most important setting
as not only does it set maximum power but it also controls the running
temperature of the engine and from there the length of the engine's life, the
life of the glow-plug and the overall reliability of the engine's running in
flight or elsewhere. Engines don't very often cut out in flight because they are
set slightly too rich, but they most certainly do when set too lean.
It takes about five minutes to
learn the drill for correct needle valve setting so it's worth taking the
trouble for the long term benefits gained.
The drill is to start the engine
on low throttle, for safety and usually easier starting due to higher gas speeds
through the venturi and consequent better atomisation of the fuel droplets. Once
started, open the throttle fully and set engine to just four-stroking rich. Leave the
engine to warm through thoroughly at top speed for a few moments, then adjust
the needle until the engine is just off four stroking and running smooth. At
this point, further leaning of the mixture results in RPM increase. From this
established point richen up slowly again until a small but definite drop in RPM is
noticed, with the engine
still two-stroking. Lift the nose of the model up vertically and if the small
loss of RPM is regained then you should have a good flight setting. If the model
has a tendency to go rich or go lean in flight then an extra allowance will have
to be made for this on the final setting.
The aim of this is to give
maximum power from the engine when it is needed most, either when the model is
climbing or when turning sharply and will also give sweet and cool running
during level flight, the best of both worlds.
What happens when an engine is
set too lean
The glow-plug engine
keeps running because the heat of compression and the catalitic action of the
glowing plug material with the methanol mixture ignite the charge in the cylinder at the correct
moment. This catalitic action also keeps the plug lit. Sometimes an engine will
start without adding glow to the plug after it has been stopped for several
minutes. A little thought will
let you see that the whole system is very temperature dependant. No spark to set
it off, no injection of fuel to set it off. Just the combination of these two
properties.
When an engine is set lean i.e.,
for maximum RPM at the start of a tankful of fuel, anything which slows the
passage of the fuel through the needle valve will make the engine run overlean.
Some engines will not continue to run in this condition and so cut dead but the
majority will continue to run to some degree.
As the tankful of fuel gets used
the fuel pressure, as seen by the needle valve, gradually reduces and as a
result the engine gets a progressively leaner mixture as the flight continues.
As the engine started set in a lean condition it must progress into the overlean
condition and maybe go so far as to cut out, suffer from overheating and get
damaged.
When the engine runs flat out,
ignition timing and engine temperature should be as the designer intended but as
the mixture gets into the overlean area temperatures will start to rise. This is
due to lack of extra internal evaporation of excess fuel, and hotter burning of
lean mixtures. Over-lean mixtures can change combustion characteristics in a way that
imparts more heat to the surrounding engine structure leaving less for useful work.
The fit of the moving parts becomes worse, and friction rises.
As a result of this the incoming
charge is heated a little more than it should be and when compressed is at a
higher temperature than it otherwise would be. The secondary effect of the
engine structure being at a little higher temperature is that the glow-plug
element is also a little hotter, which advances the onset of ignition.
As already explained, ignition
timing is controlled by the temperature of the compressed fuel/air mixture
combined with the temperature of the glow-plug element. The net result of both
of these being raised is early ignition in the next cycle.. This early ignition
gives just a little more time for even more heat to be transferred to the engine
structure before the hot gasses are exhausted from the engine and so jacking up
engine temperatures just a little more, resulting in the next cycle jacking up
temperatures yet again.
This is the slow build situation
that causes engine seizure in some cases and in other cases runaway early
ignition that makes an engine stop quickly in the air and even throw the prop, as though it has seized,
but in fact feels perfectly O.K. and runs O.K. when it has cooled down again.
Many of the modern engines do
not reach these extremes but keep running at a steadier but much higher
temperature than they were ever designed for. These engines run other risks
which are much less obvious.
One risk common to ail engines
which are run at elevated temperatures is that the oil gets very hot, thins out
too far and so can no longer lubricate as effectively as it should, resulting in
excess wear and shortened engine life.
Synthetic oil will evaporate at very high temperatures without leaving a trace
of lubrication
The less obvious damage that can
occur is not usually laid at the door of a lean fuel setting but I believe much
of the time it is a relevant factor. When the engine has overheated and reached
the point of too early ignition the burning mixture expands the gasses well
before top dead centre and so the pressures inside the cylinder are much higher
than they should be. These extra high pressures at the wrong time in the
combustion stroke try to force the piston down with greater power than the
designer intended and therefore overload the gudgeon pin in the piston and the
little end bearing, the con-rod is more highly stressed, the big end bearings
and the main bearings on the crankshaft are also subjected to higher loads.
In four stroke engines it is not uncommon that the engine will knock and even kick back
and throw the prop. Knocking can be heard, and is a typical sound like tin foil
being rubbed.
These extra stresses may only
result in wear being more rapid than necessary but if it is a regular occurrence
it can result in very early bearing failure, and if it happens to be the con-rod
that gives up first the resultant damage can be very expensive.
With all this in mind, when
adjusting the main needle of your engine the catchphrase should be 'The future
of your engine is in your hands'.
Setting the low speed
The need for a low speed
adjustment on the carburettor is because as the throttle is closed it lets less
air through into the engine and to keep the fuel air mixture within combustible
limits the fuel flow. has to be altered, it's too fussy to leave to chance.
Most manufacturers have opted
for a two needle configuration or something which works in a similar manner.
To adjust this low speed mixture
start the engine, warm it up and make sure the main needle is properly set.
Connect the glow-plug lead to energise the plug and slow engine down by
gradually closing the throttle until the engine starts to run badly. At this
point adjust the slow run needle to give smoothest running characteristics just
a little on the rich side of fastest setting. Having made this adjustment slow
the engine further until it runs badly again, now adjust slow needle until
engine runs smoothly once more and continue this step by step procedure until
the desired tickover has been reached, with the throttle barrel barely 1mm open. Now remove the plug lead and repeat the
whole process. If the engine cuts dead in the middle of adjustments it's usually
because it is too lean.
Having reached a slow tickover
we have to check if the engine will pick up properly. Open the throttle to full
speed with a smooth sweep, without jamming the controls. I know of many people
who demand their engine to respond well to slamming the throttle open, but in
two-stroke engines, this is asking for trouble and not to be recommended. If the engine picks up but splutters a
little whilst doing so, the low speed needle is a little on the rich side. If
the engine appears to miss and then picks up suddenly the low speed needle is
slightly lean, and if the engine cuts dead when the throttle is opened richen
the low speed needle 1/4 turn and try again, adjusting in small increments
If the engine starts to pick up
pretty well and then cuts at about 1/3 speed or so, try opening the main needle
two or three clicks.
On many engines there has to be
a compromise or two to get the low speed, midrange, top speed and pickup to
a useable whole, and usually the compromise is that somewhere in the
range the carburettor has to be set a little richer than would be considered
ideal.
Rich mixtures are an assurance for longevity and seldom cause the engine to
stop, unless extreme.
Four
stroke engines
The previous sections are
written specifically for two-strokes, but exactly the same principles apply to a
four-stroke, just some of the symptoms are slightly different.
When running-in from new use a
fuel with 20% oil of which at least half is castor oil for the first runs. A four-stroke cannot be made to
four-stroke when rich, it's already doing it, but what does happen is the engine
misfires in a rather uneven manner, the richer the setting the more pronounced
the misfire. The main needle, after running in, is set in exactly the same
manner i.e., just on the slightly rich side of maximum RPM., when the engine is
thoroughly hot.
The use of a rev. meter is invaluable here, because adjustment by ear is more
difficult than in two-strokes.
If the main needle is set too
lean the engine may slow down with the. exhaust exhibiting a more leaden note
than usual and may progress to the point where the engine stops with a bang due
to 'detonation' and throws the propeller off in flight, or on the ground and
perhaps at whoever is standing in the way.
'Detonation' is like early
ignition but the difference is that instead of the mixture burning progressively
from the glow-plug outwards, the temperature and pressure in the cylinder are
such that the whole fuel charge ignites at the same time, before TDC, stops the
piston dead, and blows it back the other way.
'Knocking' or 'Pinking' are like
a slightly milder form of detonation that happens late enough in the compression
stroke for the flywheel effect of the propeller to get the piston over TDC and
therefore for the engine to keep running. Always close the throttle and open the
main needle a bit more when this
happens as it overstresses, and may damage the engine.
The main defence against these
phenomena is to run the engine a little richer, and mix in some acetone (1%
- 3%) in the fuel to stabilize combustion. Adding some 2% of water
to the fuel may also suppress Knocking. (in hot, humid weather). This works in two distinct ways,
first the richer mixture will keep the engine a little cooler, thus making the
conditions for commencement of 'knocking' harder to attain and secondly and very
importantly, a rich mixture is much less prone to detonation than a lean
mixture. These two effects work together, either for you or against you
depending whether you set the main needle rich or lean.
Again, the engine's fate is in your hands.
The low speed needle is adjusted
in the same manner as a two-stroke except generally speaking it needs to be
noticeably richer than a two-stroke, to ensure a good pick-up when the throttle
is opened and also on some engines to stop 'knocking', and the consequent risk
of throwing the propeller, whilst the engine is picking up speed.
In general, speed pick-up from idle is far more better in four-strokes than
that in two-strokes
A Few General Do-'s and Don'ts
ˇ
Always keep your engine clean.
ˇ
Choose the propeller that allows the engine to run in the
RPM range that the designer intended.
ˇ
Always filter your fuel from fuel bottle to tank and from
tank to engine, and keep the filters clean.
ˇ
Don't wipe model with cloth that sheds fibres, some will
undoubtedly find their way into the needle valve or somewhere just as
inconvenient, and upset the mixture setting.
ˇ
Don't use a damaged propeller, It has a tip speed of over
half the speed of sound, and to shed a blade can
obviously be lethal.
ˇ
Always balance propellers and if possible spinners as
there will be less vibration to affect the engine, model and radio.
ˇ
Make sure your glow-plug battery is charged before you go
out.
ˇ
At the end of a days running 'dry' the engine out by
pulling the fuel line off with engine running. Apply glow, and keep flicking the
prop, until no sign of ignition is left. Then put a few drops of oil (not fuel) in the carburettor
and ensure it is dispersed throughout the engine. Methanol fuel attracts water
and is corrosive to
steel, aluminium and copper bearing alloys.
It is also possible, to make a mix with your standard mix oil and cleaning
naphtha, drop a bit in the engine intake, ad glow and let the engine run on that
mix with the fuel line disconnected. Now all traces of methanol, nitromethane
and nitric acid will be expelled from the engine.
Beware!
The Naphtha mix can not be used on engines which have silicone parts inside the
crankcase, like some YS four-strokes
ˇ
Never store the model nose down in the corner of your
garage, going home in the car, or even while cleaning it at the field, if it is
fitted with a tuned pipe or an extra large silencer. The exhaust residue which
collects in these is a dirty mix of condensed water, methanol, nitric acid and
oil which is highly corrosive and would run straight back into the
engine.
ˇ
If the engine is badly 'flooded' i.e., liquid fuel in the
crankcase turn the model over in such a manner that the excess fuel in the
crankcase runs up the transfer passage, into the cylinder through the transfer
port (make sure it's open-piston at the bottom of it's stroke), across the
cylinder, out of the exhaust port and out of the silencer.
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If
you feel the urge to mix your own fuel, here are some tables with fuel
properties that may come in useful.