Lynn Matteson
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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				 Posted: Tue Aug 11, 2009 4:31 am    Post subject: Some interesting temperatures recorded | 
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				Since I bought and installed the Rotec TBI-40 mechanical fuel  
 injector on my Jabiru 2200 mechanical lifter engine, serial #2062,  
 I've been pretty impressed with the results. Mainly the ability to  
 adjust the mixture. For the last month, I've been making flights at  
 various speeds and directions, and recording the EGT's and CHT's and  
 rpm's and fuel flows with the Bing carb, and for the last week with  
 the TBI. All the tests have been done with flights into the wind,  
 with the wind, and perpendicular to the wind, and mostly at about  
 2000-3000 feet AGL.
 Yesterday I decided to average the results. While this is certainly  
 not a scientific approach, it's the best I could do without having a  
 recording device aboard, and feeding the info into a computer.
 
 Bing:             EGT spread 89 deg F.
                        CHT spread 44.4 deg F
 	              Fuel flow   4.27 gph
 
 Rotec TBI:    EGT spread 84 deg F.
 		       CHT spread 21 deg F.
                         Fuel flow   3.25 gph	
 
 While these numbers may not mean much without the actual temperature  
 numbers, it is interesting that I saw CHT's for the TBI as close as 3  
 degrees apart, ranging from 322 to 325.
 
 (Keep in mind that I take my readings from a thermocouple attached  
 directly on the head, between the spark plugs, not on the spark plug  
 location which puts the reading about a half-inch ABOVE the head, so  
 my CHT readings will show a higher number.)
 
 Other readings of CHT's show spreads of 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 20, etc.  
 The closest I was ever able to get the Bing CHT's was 30, 31, 34, 35,  
 36, etc. In thinking about why this differential in CHT's should be,  
 between the Bing and the TBI, I can only point to the fact that the  
 Bing has a horizontal throttle plate and shaft to which it is  
 mounted, and the TBI has....in my installation, anyway....a vertical  
 fuel-discharge tube, the only obstruction in the airflow at wide-open- 
 throttle (WOT).  Now the Jabiru has a vertical splitter, and maybe  
 the vertical discharge tube and the vertical splitter make for less  
 turbulence, and therefore more even fuel charges going into each  
 cylinder, I don't know for sure. But the numbers are showing  
 something to be quite different in the CHT department at least, and a  
 less dramatic comparison in the EGT's.
 
 I'm gonna start going on longer flights today, and see how the  
 numbers look while actually going somewhere besides around the patch.
 
 Lynn Matteson
 Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
 Jabiru 2200, #2062, 727.5 hrs
 Sensenich 62"x46" Wood prop
 Electroair direct-fire ignition system
 Rotec TBI-40 injection
 Status: TBI installation done...tests flights underway
 
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  _________________ Lynn
 
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
 
N369LM | 
			 
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