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rigging a thermocouple on a certified plane

 
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 02, 2009 9:20 am    Post subject: rigging a thermocouple on a certified plane Reply with quote

At 11:10 AM 9/2/2009, you wrote:
Quote:

<bbradburry(at)bellsouth.net>

My son owns a Mooney. He can not lean it past about 50-100 degrees rich of
peak with out it starting to miss. He is burning about 12 Gal/Hr at cruise
when I think he should be able to get to about 10. He could benefit from
some type of injector balancing like from GAMI. Problem is he doesn't have
the necessary EGT probes to get the information for each cylinder and
installing a certified rig to do this would be too expensive.
My thought is that he could clamp probes to the outside of the exhaust
manifold tubes for each cylinder and run them to a reader head in the
cockpit to get "close enough" information for this application. I have
thermocouple wire and could make the probes. Where could he come upon an
inexpensive reader head for thermocouples.

One of my favorite sources of converting various phenomena
into recorded or displayed data is Weeder Technologies.

http://www.weedtech.com/

They offer a 4-channel thermocouple signal conditioner
that you can read on the USB port of a laptop. Check out
the WTTCI thermocouple module for $109. They even offer
software at no charge that will let you display, record,
and/or graph the data.

Quote:
What is the community take on this? Would it work? Is it legal if it is not
permanently attached to the plane?

It's not possible to achieve necessary precision
for balancing individual cylinder performance
without extending a REAL EGT probe into the
gas stream for the cylinder of interest. Now,
this only requires one small hole through which
you can install the standard type K EGT probe.

This is largely between you and your AI at the
next annual . . . how's the "approved" way to
plug 3 holes that you're not using any more.
Do you have a single probe EGT installed now?
I would think you could install 3 additional
EGT probes for the purpose of switching them
to a single instrument. The fact that you
used the extra probes for some investigative
activity in the past . . . or have even abandoned
the switch in favor of the single display
but left three probes in place to "plug the
holes" shouldn't be a hard sell either.

In any case, the probes need to get into the
approximate center of gas flow in the pipe.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 02, 2009 11:39 am    Post subject: rigging a thermocouple on a certified plane Reply with quote

At 12:07 PM 9/2/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


Here's a dedicated K-type meter:

http://www.virtualvillage.com/digital-thermometer-for-k-type-thermocouples/sku003920-016

If the above wraps, try this:

http://tinyurl.com/kloqam

Yeah, that works too. You can rig a 2-pole, 4-position
rotary switch to "scan" the 4 probes for comparison.
See:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/excerpt.pdf
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 02, 2009 5:35 pm    Post subject: rigging a thermocouple on a certified plane Reply with quote

Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:

<nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>

At 12:07 PM 9/2/2009, you wrote:
>
> <mprather(at)spro.net>
>
> Here's a dedicated K-type meter:
>
> http://www.virtualvillage.com/digital-thermometer-for-k-type-thermocouples/sku003920-016
> If the above wraps, try this:
>
> http://tinyurl.com/kloqam

Yeah, that works too. You can rig a 2-pole, 4-position
rotary switch to "scan" the 4 probes for comparison.
See:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/excerpt.pdf
Bob . . .

What I found even more interesting is the list of available probes,
including

http://www.virtualvillage.com/k-type-thermocouple-temperature-sensor-probe-10ft-3m/sku003820-032

good to 800 degrees C.

Any thoughts on adapting this as an EGT probe? I like $5.99 a lot better
than $30-$40 for a purpose-built aviation probe. Also, I wonder if it
would be suitable for CHT in the 250-450 F range (120-260C) with a meter
that's compatible with a K series probe.

Charlie


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