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Backfire or Afterfire

 
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george.mueller(at)aurora.
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 6:00 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

I am at the point of doing full power run-ups with my Zenith 701 with a rotax 912 UL 80hp installed with a Skyshops firewall forward kit. When I do a full power run up, I get a backfire (or afterfire maybe) after I turn the ignition key to "off". When I taxi around keeping the engine to around 2,000 rpm, this does not happen after shutdown, only after I do a full power run-up. Everything else seems normal as far as I can tell, the engine starts really well, seems to run smoothly, idles well. But after doing three full power run ups, I have had three backfires, all after turning off the ignition. Does anyone on the list have an idea about what might be causing this?


George in Milwaukee
701 912UL [quote][b]


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Jari Kaija



Joined: 23 Feb 2006
Posts: 69

PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 6:53 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

You are doing WHAT! Turning off ignition, while engine runs at maximum speed?
What kind of test is this? Newer heard and I have quite a lott of experience with
single piston aeroplanes, since I got my PPL license -96!

Don't destroy your engine.

Think a while! When you turn ignition off and engine have such kind of
rpm. All gasoline/air mix will flow to muffler, because that mix didn't
blow out in the cylinders. And muffler, when there is enough gas/air mix
in a hot "steel botle", WILL catch fire!!!!

[quote] ---


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Jari Kaija



Joined: 23 Feb 2006
Posts: 69

PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 6:55 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

...or did you mention fire in the carburetor's intake?
[quote][b]


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klr12(at)psu.edu
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 8:04 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

Mr. Pilot,
Ever hear of AD 76-07-12, BENDIX IGNITION SWITCHES?
KLR
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601zv(at)ritternet.com
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 8:40 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

I believe he clearly said "AFTER I do a full power run-up," not DURING.

Do not archive.
[quote] ---


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Trainnut01(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 10:10 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

When I was involved with Nascar during the eighties several times during each weeks testing we would do a "Plug check" The procedure required the driver to run several hot laps, then right at the end of the back straight he would turn off the ignition (at full throttle), take the car out of gear, and coast to the pits. The crew would then push the car back to the garage, quickly remove the sparks plugs and rush them to the Champion Spark Plug trailer to have them "read" by the Champion Rep. The plugs were then returned to us with notations as to which ones should have gaskets added and which ones should have gaskets removed. Apparently the plug temp can be controlled by gasket thickness. I did not understand this at the time (not in my job description) and I don't understand it now but I do know that cutting the ignition at full throttle told somebody something.
Carroll

do not archive

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crvsecretary



Joined: 18 Mar 2007
Posts: 38
Location: Naugatuck, CT

PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 11:08 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

I've heard of this procedure to check the size of the main jet in the carburator and the heat range of the plug. Adding & removing gaskets might change the amount of heat the plug can shed to the cylinder head, but typically heat range is built into the plug.

Tracy Smith
Naugatuck, CT
Do Not Archive



In a message dated 9/4/2007 1:11:10 PM Eastern Standard Time, Trainnut01(at)aol.com writes:
Quote:
When I was involved with Nascar during the eighties several times during each weeks testing we would do a "Plug check" The procedure required the driver to run several hot laps, then right at the end of the back straight he would turn off the ignition (at full throttle), take the car out of gear, and coast to the pits. The crew would then push the car back to the garage, quickly remove the sparks plugs and rush them to the Champion Spark Plug trailer to have them "read" by the Champion Rep. The plugs were then returned to us with notations as to which ones should have gaskets added and which ones should have gaskets removed. Apparently the plug temp can be controlled by gasket thickness. I did not understand this at the time (not in my job description) and I don't understand it now but I do know that cutting the ignition at full throttle told somebody something.
Carroll

do not archive





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Zenith 601XL N458XL (reserved)
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Tail Complete; working on wings
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dougsnash(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 11:41 am    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

George, I have a similar set up but am still about six
months away from run-ups. That being said, sounds
like you could have a mixture issue (running rich and
loading up the exhust with unburned fuel) but I would
be more suspicious of fuel quality. Maybe try a
different souce for your fuel. Might be stale fuel or
something.

Food for thought at least.

Doug MacDonald
CH-701 Scratch Builder, 912 UL
NW Ontario, Canada
Working on throttle assy.
--- george.mueller(at)aurora.org wrote:

Quote:
I am at the point of doing full power run-ups with
my Zenith 701 with a
rotax 912 UL 80hp installed with a Skyshops firewall
forward kit. When I
do a full power run up, I get a backfire (or
afterfire maybe) after I turn
the ignition key to "off". When I taxi around
keeping the engine to
around 2,000 rpm, this does not happen after
shutdown, only after I do a
full power run-up. Everything else seems normal as
far as I can tell, the
engine starts really well, seems to run smoothly,
idles well. But after
doing three full power run ups, I have had three
backfires, all after
turning off the ignition. Does anyone on the list
have an idea about what
might be causing this?


George in Milwaukee
701 912UL


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planecrazydld(at)yahoo.co
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 12:06 pm    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

The only way to get an accurate and readable color condition on the plug is to shut down at high throttle. Allowing the engine to come down through the rpm and power bands will contaminate the purity og the data to be extracted by "reading" the plugs. I am fascinated by the gasket shifting though; what was being learned/accomplished there?

Dave Downey
Harleysville (SE) PA
100 HP Corvair



---


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n801bh(at)netzero.com
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 3:52 pm    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

I drove those things back in the eighties and also built a few motors for them too. I read my own plugs to determine fuel mixture but more critical was looking for proper ignition timing. I still do it every few months as my plane has a NASCAR style motor in it. It took me a couple of times of explaining to the control tower why I would actually shut off a good running motor about half way down the runway at full throttle. <G> The backfire is caused by unburned fuel in the exhaust system, it is lit off by either the glowing exhaust valves or some real hot carbon build up in the pipes. All well built engines are dyno run before they get to the track and changing plug gaskets will "index"the ground strap on the plug to get optimal combustion. The slight difference in fuel mixture between cylinders is usually tweaked during flow testing of the intake manifold and intake ports on a flow bench, this happens before the motor isassembledAfter reading the plugs I would determine if the timing is correct, then I would make a jet change if needed and as a last result I would make a spark plug heat range change.If the original poster would let the motor cool a few minutes before shutting off the ignition it will probably not backfire.
Do not archive

When I was involved with Nascar during the eighties several times during each weeks testing we would do a "Plug check" The procedure required the driver to run several hot laps, then right at the end of the back straight he would turn off the ignition (at full throttle), take the car out of gear, and coast to the pits. The crew would then push the car back to the garage, quickly remove the sparks plugs and rush them to the Champion Spark Plug trailer to have them "read" by the Champion Rep. The plugs were then returned to us with notations as to which ones should have gaskets added and which ones should have gaskets removed. Apparently the plug temp can be controlled by gasket thickness. I did not understand this at the time (not in my job description) and I don't understand it now but I do know that cutting the ignition at full throttle told somebody something.
Carroll

do not archive


The only way to get an accurate and readable color condition on the plug is to shut down at high throttle. Allowing the engine to come down through the rpm and power bands will contaminate the purity og the data to be extracted by "reading" the plugs. I am fascinated by the gasket shifting though; what was being learned/accomplished there?

Dave Downey
Harleysville (SE) PA
100 HP Corvair

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vgstol(at)bigpond.net.au
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 4:01 pm    Post subject: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

And make certain the throttle is held completely closed and the idle slowed right down.
Do not archive.
JG
[quote] ---


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ashontz



Joined: 27 Dec 2006
Posts: 723

PostPosted: Wed Sep 05, 2007 6:34 am    Post subject: Re: Backfire or Afterfire Reply with quote

Apparently heat is involved. I'm sure the engine is a lot hotter after a full power run up. Even so, you really shouldn't be shutting down and engine at full power. I don't think it will hurt the engine, unless a backfire blows out a gasket somewhere, but even so, there's no reason to be shutting down at full power.

Looking at a fellow builders 912 I can see that the carbs on those things aren't very complicated. It's not like a car engine that has an O2 sensor and all kinds of other engine management systems. That being said, it's easy to create a situation where you can fool the engine into behaving badly. An airplane engine isn't meant to be much more than an adjustable oversized lawner engine. It provides power, but it's not meant to be revved up and down and all over. It's meant more for slower, more controlled inputs.

Even so, they sell some pretty cool engine diagnostic tools these days, inline mixture meters as well as special temporary spark plugs that are mae with see-through glass that you can actually see the flame inside the cylinder. Another cheap method is to go down to Autozone and get a $25 O2 sensor, install it in the exhaust and hookup a volt meter to it and the O2 sensor will send back a voltage that is calibrated to indicate O2 levels in the exhaust. If you take a O2 sensor and put it in a vise and hookup an ohmmeter it will read (I believe) infinate ohms when cold and just outside air, heat it up with a propane torch and the reading goes to like 1k ohms or something like that. It needs to be hot to operate correctly, but the combination of the heat and the blue torch flame (no oxygen left because it's fully burned) moves the ohmmeter full range. In a car, that's what controls the mixture, the O2 sensor sends the signal to the carb and the carb adjusts the mixture several times per second. You could easier install a gauge on the instrument panel to show what the O2 sensor sees and calibrate it, all for about $35.

[quote="george.mueller(at)aurora."]I am at the point of doing full power run-ups with my Zenith 701 with a rotax 912 UL 80hp installed with a Skyshops firewall forward kit. When I do a full power run up, I get a backfire (or afterfire maybe) after I turn the ignition key to "off". When I taxi around keeping the engine to around 2,000 rpm, this does not happen after shutdown, only after I do a full power run-up. Everything else seems normal as far as I can tell, the engine starts really well, seems to run smoothly, idles well. But after doing three full power run ups, I have had three backfires, all after turning off the ignition. Does anyone on the list have an idea about what might be causing this?


George in Milwaukee
701 912UL
Quote:
[b]


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