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Engine Running Rough
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Float Flyr



Joined: 19 Jul 2006
Posts: 2704
Location: Campbellton, Newfoundland

PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:01 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

The more I read the more I think there is a case for the single mag and a
single CDI. Two different technologies, two different weaknesses but when
combined they could offer more protection from an engine out.

One thing is for certain in the very near future there will be a big push on
to clean up GA engines. Whether you start installing at least one CDI with
variable timing or junk the whole lot and switch to Diesel only the future
will tell. Be prepared for big changes!

Noel

[quote] --


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Terry Watson



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 290
Location: Seattle, WA USA

PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:11 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

I am surprised no one has yet mentioned E-mags in this thread.
http://www.emagair.com/Intro.htm
I have no experience with them but the reports of their product and service
have been excellent. In essence it is an electronic ignition that is a
bolt-on replacement for a mag. One model requires outside power, but the
other has its own built-in electrical source.

Terry
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Float Flyr



Joined: 19 Jul 2006
Posts: 2704
Location: Campbellton, Newfoundland

PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:29 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

They also have more than one generator. More than one engine. %They can
sustain flight on one engine. If they have a massive electrical failure in
flight the engines won't just stop and become huge anchors. If the lights
in the cockpit wouldn't tell the crew they wouldn't even know about the
power loss.

Noel

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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 10:56 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Kelly McMullen wrote:
Quote:


Yeah, right. I was using CD ignition on a car 35 years ago(and it
failed within 2 years). Show me an electronic ignition that is self
powered and stone reliable and I'll come over to your side. So far,
the automotive technology that has proven superior for aircraft, sum
total, will fit in a C-150. Porsche tried and failed. Dozens have
tried the aluminum Chevy, and failed. VW, Corvair, Subaru...all niche
curiosities that haven't made it to mainstream. Face it. There isn't
an electronic ignition that passes the dead battery test. Until that
is possible, you are just bandaiding around the problem with dual
buses and other backups.

For those who don't know yet and are trying to learn:

Mags fail.

Mags fail with some frequency.

There's typically only one carb or injection controller, but there are
almost always 2 mags. It ain't just about better combustion.

If standalone ignition floats your boat, google 'p-mag' & 'e-mag' to
come close to the 'ideal'.

Charlie


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PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 1:48 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

No, no confusion. Also had later factory electronic ignition leave me
stranded at -40. They have several points of failure. Can't tell you
how many engine management CPUs get changed out regularly. Alternators
are no more reliable than they ever were. All fine for cars. Not so
fine for aviation. A mag failure shortly after overhaul indicates a
shop that is incompetent. I have yet to have a mag actually fail in 35
years of flying. Had P-lead short a mag to ground, but no mag failure.
You are welcome to go complex electronics. Your choice. That is what
experimental is all about.

On 2/19/07, Wayne Sweet <w_sweet(at)comcast.net> wrote:
[quote]

You are confusing CDI's of today with 35 years ago. First, cars 35 years ago
were junk compared to cars of today. All cars today have electronic ignition
systems; i.e. CDI's.
Also the only failures I have had with alternators in my MustangII were from
wire terminal failures, partly my fault for not supporting the B-wire or the
field wire close the terminal. In 6000 hours of flying "store bought"
airplanes only had one failure (at night in a Cardinal) that cause a
complete electrical failure. If that were to happen in my plane, I would
still be flying 2 hours after the failure because of the backup battery.
BTW, I had a mag go south because of points coming apart after only 24 hours
in service; the maintenance facility that overhauled the mag said, "That
happens sometimes". WHAT!!! REALLY!!!!
Lessons learned 35 years ago no longer apply today.
Wayne

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 2:17 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

I run the exact set up as NASCAR runs in their cars. Dual 6AL MSD boxes, custom Mallory dual pick up distributor, dual coils, Ign # 1 is wired to the main buss. Ign # 2 gets its power straight from the positive post of the Optima Red top gel cell battery. When the DAR inspected my plane he wanted to know the redundancy of the ignition system. Once I explained the concept and told him my battery had the capacity of running the ign for 6+ hours he said and I quote " Well, I guess after you land and refuel twice and still keep flying with a bad alternator you should qualify for the Darwin award". The thing is bulletproof and in all the years of NASCAR there has never been a complete failure of both systems at one time. And those boys can really give it the torture test. <G> There are some pics on my website of my ignition system installed in the beast. Look for the red boxes and coils on the top right engine side of the firewall. Of course this rant is directed at the experimental guys, you certified guys are stuck with 70 year old technology.......................

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 3:20 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

There is an interior switch that will run one or the other. (just in case)

[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 7:53 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Kelly,
No wholly true.
P Mags (emagair.com) is an electronic ignition that has its own internal generator such that should the electrics fail, it can continue running at speeds above idle (about 700 rpm) therefore performing essentially like a mag. When power is available, it enjoys the advantages of electronic ignition.
Stan Sutterfield

Quote:
There isn't an electronic
ignition made that will fire without a power source. Lose your
electrics and the engine WILL quit. OK in a car, not okay in a plane.
A magneto provides plenty of voltage to fire the proper gaps for
aircraft plugs at all engine speeds above idle.


[quote][b]


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PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 8:44 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Yes, I was aware of PMag and it probably is as good an alternative as
you can get for a 4 cyl engine. However, it isn't available for a 6
cylinder yet, and:
"Even the P-MAG model needs some source of outside power at start-up.
If you are prop starting because the battery is "low", there is plenty
of power for the ignition. If you're battery is "almost" dead (you
only get a faint glow from the cabin light) you probably have enough
power for the ignition. However if you're battery is removed or is
absolutely/totally dead, you cannot prop start with the electronic
ignition and "no" outside power. "

On 2/19/07, Speedy11(at)aol.com <Speedy11(at)aol.com> wrote:
Quote:

Kelly,
No wholly true.
P Mags (emagair.com) is an electronic ignition that has its own internal
generator such that should the electrics fail, it can continue running at
speeds above idle (about 700 rpm) therefore performing essentially like a
mag. When power is available, it enjoys the advantages of electronic
ignition.
Stan Sutterfield

There isn't an electronic
ignition made that will fire without a power source. Lose your
electrics and the engine WILL quit. OK in a car, not okay in a plane.
A magneto provides plenty of voltage to fire the proper gaps for
aircraft plugs at all engine speeds above idle.



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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 5:45 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

There are many more benefits to a dual electrical system than just the
ignition system. If a required vacuum system is replaced by a second
battery and/or alternator, then failure of a primary (electric) gyro is
reduced dramatically. The additional cost, weight and complexity is
negligible (and for some designs, even negative).

Magnetos are far more failure prone than CDI ignition systems. One mag, one
EI means you will be spending time and money on the mag for to keep the
redundancy. Parts commonality is a benefit of two identical systems.

Douglas L. Dodson, Jr.
Glasair II-S FT
Flight Test Engineer, CFI-A,G

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 6:47 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

An interesting opinion, not based in fact. A dual electrical system
requires two alternators(heavier than a vacuum pump and one
alternator), two batteries(Significant extra wt), two totally separate
buses. If you interconnect them, you leave the possibility of one
failure taking out both systems. If you don't interconnect you have to
be able to live with what is on either bus by itself, which means you
will need some additional duplication. That is not simpler, nor less
complex. I have yet to see a failure-proof electrical system. Better
to have enough to keep flying when(not if) the electrics fail.
I have yet to see a CDI system that is more reliable than properly
maintained magnetos, in 35 years of flying and maintaining aircraft
and autos. The P-Mag/Emag(and others) may change that, eventually.
They have been talking certification for several years. Prism from
GAMI holds a lot of promise when it gets certified.
The main mag failures you see are when folks try to skimp and run
magnetos 1000+ hours without service. They should be opened and
inspected every 500 hours. Sometimes folks have to relearn hard
lessons all over again. You are free to do that with experimental
aircraft.
KM
A&P/IA
CP ASMEL-I

On 2/20/07, Doug Dodson <douglas.dodson(at)pobox.com> wrote:
Quote:


There are many more benefits to a dual electrical system than just the
ignition system. If a required vacuum system is replaced by a second
battery and/or alternator, then failure of a primary (electric) gyro is
reduced dramatically. The additional cost, weight and complexity is
negligible (and for some designs, even negative).

Magnetos are far more failure prone than CDI ignition systems. One mag, one
EI means you will be spending time and money on the mag for to keep the
redundancy. Parts commonality is a benefit of two identical systems.

Douglas L. Dodson, Jr.
Glasair II-S FT
Flight Test Engineer, CFI-A,G



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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 6:51 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

I agree.

Mike Larkin

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 6:59 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

I agree. My plane also does not have the stupid vacuum systems either. Dynon
D10A EFIS WITH internal battery backup. Is it not time to move past "the
Past" and come into the 21st Century. I had the chance to fly in a Columbia
350 with the older Avidyne glass panel; very nice. BUT IT STILL HAS A VACUUM
SYSTEM! GEZZZZZ!
Wayne

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 8:15 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Guys, I fly a non-electric J-3. My goal is to keep it as light as
possible. In what way would a dual electrical system benefit me?
Smile
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 9:52 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Kelly,

If you use have a dual electrical system it requires two alternators
yes. A small 20 amp B&C alternator is very close to the weight of a
vacuum pump, drive, regulator, and required plumbing. And the B&C
alternator in my very small 13,000+ hours of flying and my 30 year of
aircraft maintenance shows the it should be much more reliable. If you
need a 30 amp hour or more battery like a G-35 for starting then two
smaller Odyssey batteries will give you the same start power for less
weight. And if you are as paranoid as you sound then an old fashion
gang switch for the system inter connect with a safety strap for you
will keep the system disconnected in flight. As for your following
statements about reliability, almost everything works without failure if
properly maintained. The electrical system is in my experience the most
under maintained system in an airplane. How many Cessna's have you
looked at where ALL of the switches are 30 plus years old. The simple
fact is that most people don't do anything to an electrical system until
something fails. As far as fail proof, I fly airplanes of all types;
little, middle, and big over 800 hours a year and so far I have not
experienced a total electrical failure to a dark plane. As for the
P-mag, I recovered an RV-7 from a highway two weekends ago when Both
P-mags failed. Guess what, the electrical system worked perfectly......

Mike Larkin

ATP MEL, Com SEL, Many Types Rat., A&P, & IE

Lancair Legacy Build and Flown by Me
TS-11 Iskra Restored and Flown by Me
Kitfox IV re-engined and Flown by Me
A320/319 Flown by Me....

Ps- I only get this way with very very closed minded people.....

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 10:29 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Hello Mike,

If this is the same incident I don't think the Pmags actually both
failed, although the effect was similar. What I think probably happened
was the timing on one of the P mags went way advanced. In this scenario
the second Pmag is just along for the ride, i.e it sparks but the charge
has already been lit at that point and hence doesn't do anything.

This is still the subject of investigation as we speak...I certainly
hope they find it 'cus I run Pmags myself.

I think kelly's point was that the traditional magnetoes are more
reliable than Pmags.

Frank

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 10:43 am    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Mike,
Unlike you, I'm not trying to persuade anyone that one system is
better than the other. I've stated anyone can select what they want in
experimental and make their own judgements.
However, I flew for over 20 years in the Alaskan bush. That colors my
opinion. I don't have any reason to fly a GA plane routinely in hard
IFR(I choose not to fly for hire)...that also colors my opinion of
electric systems. Gee...2 Pmags fail in flight...who da thunkit!
Again, Pmag isn't available for 6 cylinders. Fact.......last I checked
Barrett Precsion Engines would not supply an engine with electronic
ignition, and their dyno tests showed less horsepower and hotter CHT
with electronic ignition(IIRC). (they've built and tested more engines
in a year than anyone here will in a lifetime). I'm open to the idea,
but not impressed with the current products on the market. I just was
refuting the claim by someone else that CD or other EI was better than
dual mags. Yes, you can minimize the weight of two electrical systems,
but it still is more complex than a single system with a vacuum pump
powering one gyro, and if it makes you feel better you can add a
second electric AI. I have experienced total electric failure in two
different aircraft in flight and others on the ground, on well
maintained aircraft. Zero vacuum pump failures. Everyone has different
exeriences
There also is some very careful testing of electronic ignition against
dual mags on the Cafe400 website..well instrumented, etc. For the
narrow spectrum of high altitude, less than 70% power, dual EI showed
some added speed and fuel economy, at the expense of higher CHT. For
all higher power power and altitudes below 10,000 ft, the dual mags
were superior in all instances.
http://cafefoundation.org/v2/research_reports.php

On 2/20/07, Mike <mlas(at)cox.net> wrote:
[quote]

Kelly,

If you use have a dual electrical system it requires two alternators
yes. A small 20 amp B&C alternator is very close to the weight of a
vacuum pump, drive, regulator, and required plumbing. And the B&C
alternator in my very small 13,000+ hours of flying and my 30 year of
aircraft maintenance shows the it should be much more reliable. If you
need a 30 amp hour or more battery like a G-35 for starting then two
smaller Odyssey batteries will give you the same start power for less
weight. And if you are as paranoid as you sound then an old fashion
gang switch for the system inter connect with a safety strap for you
will keep the system disconnected in flight. As for your following
statements about reliability, almost everything works without failure if
properly maintained. The electrical system is in my experience the most
under maintained system in an airplane. How many Cessna's have you
looked at where ALL of the switches are 30 plus years old. The simple
fact is that most people don't do anything to an electrical system until
something fails. As far as fail proof, I fly airplanes of all types;
little, middle, and big over 800 hours a year and so far I have not
experienced a total electrical failure to a dark plane. As for the
P-mag, I recovered an RV-7 from a highway two weekends ago when Both
P-mags failed. Guess what, the electrical system worked perfectly......

Mike Larkin

ATP MEL, Com SEL, Many Types Rat., A&P, & IE

Lancair Legacy Build and Flown by Me
TS-11 Iskra Restored and Flown by Me
Kitfox IV re-engined and Flown by Me
A320/319 Flown by Me....

Ps- I only get this way with very very closed minded people.....

--


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 1:01 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

Frank,

To the best of my knowledge you are correct. One of the P-mags came off
time for some unknown reason (we think induced by temperature) and the
other was along for the ride.

Mike

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 4:34 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

To the best of my knowledge you are correct. One of the P-mags came off
time for some unknown reason.....

That's not good to hear.....If they knew the reason, they could fix it....If
they don't know the reason .... Well, then what?

Best... Steve

----Original Message Follows----
From: "Mike" <mlas(at)cox.net>
Reply-To: engines-list(at)matronics.com
To: <engines-list(at)matronics.com>
Subject: RE: Engine Running Rough
Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2007 14:00:21 -0700



Frank,

To the best of my knowledge you are correct. One of the P-mags came off
time for some unknown reason (we think induced by temperature) and the
other was along for the ride.

Mike

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 5:21 pm    Post subject: Engine Running Rough Reply with quote

They may not know for absolute sure but there is a failure mode they
found that allows the unit with certain software versions to lose its
timing. There is a sevice bulletin on the Emag website about it.

It certainly makes sense and fits the description of the issues on the
downed airplane. I also had the same issues but my engine did not
actually quit.

Frank

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