Diagnosing sudden rough idle

Geoffrey William Rutledge

Filing Flight Plan
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Mar 29, 2021
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Geoff
Have an IO-360, at 1715 hours in my Glasair IIsFT.
This weekend, after startup, developed rough running at idle, with a low temp on CHT #3
On run up, the #3 cylinder temp rose to equal the others.
Cruise flight was smooth, with equal CHT on all cylinders.
Then on power back, and at idle, the engine is very rough again. It's not subtle, feels like trying to run on 2 or 3 cylinders.

Fuel controller was replaced ~300 hours ago.
Mag checks are fine (dual p-mags).
After power down, compressions on warm/hot engine all 72-76 lbs.
The upper plugs all look fine too.

Any ideas for source of the problem? Could it be an induction leak??
Could it be a failing exhaust valve that's not leaking when the engine is warm?

How best to diagnose the problem?
Geoff
 
Intake gaskets? Check for blue stains.
 
I’ve never found a slipped hose. Cracked yes, but not slipped. I typically change out the rubber hoses when I do the intake gaskets anyway. While you have all of that apart also check the tubes that go into the manifold. Not terribly likely, but they can become loose. If so they will need to be reseated with a special tool.
 
Thanks very much for your helpful responses. I found a significant intake leak at the #3 cylinder (sprayed soapy water, used the compression tester to pressurize the cylinder, and backed the propellor off from TDC by 1/4 turn to open the intake valve and ‘burp’ the intake pipe)
 
Thanks very much for your helpful responses. I found a significant intake leak at the #3 cylinder (sprayed soapy water, used the compression tester to pressurize the cylinder, and backed the propellor off from TDC by 1/4 turn to open the intake valve and ‘burp’ the intake pipe)
Did you have any luck resolving the issue?
 
Did you have any luck resolving the issue?
I'm waiting on ACS to send me new intake gaskets, but I'm highly confident that stopping the leaking intake will have my engine purring at idle once again!
The source of the leak wasn't a bad gasket, it was a loosened bolt holding the intake pipe on the cylinder. The existing gasket was actually in good condition.
I suspect a mechanic failed to put a new star washer on the bolt the last time it was tightened.
Cheers, Geoff
 
Thanks very much for your helpful responses. I found a significant intake leak at the #3 cylinder (sprayed soapy water, used the compression tester to pressurize the cylinder, and backed the propellor off from TDC by 1/4 turn to open the intake valve and ‘burp’ the intake pipe)

I have seen this procedure on a video on Youtube. Seems like an excellent way to look for leaks. Were you able to do this by yourself or did you have help? It seems like a two person job since pressurizing a cylinder will cause the prop to move. I wanted to do this on my airplane. Trying to track down a possible leak. I was just seeing if it is definitely a two person job. Thanks.
 
Indeed, I suspect I saw the same Youtube video. I did use a helper. I found that the best way to get the "burp" was to find TDC, rotate backwards 1/4 turn, then turn on the air. At that position the intake valve is open, so no pressure builds at that point. Then I moved the prop toward TDC, feeling the pressure build (and the gauge shows pressure rising in the cylinder). Then release the prop and get a loud burp. If you can stand by the prop and see the cylinder head it's possible to do this as a one-person operation, but much easier with a helper!
 
Indeed, I suspect I saw the same Youtube video. I did use a helper. I found that the best way to get the "burp" was to find TDC, rotate backwards 1/4 turn, then turn on the air. At that position the intake valve is open, so no pressure builds at that point. Then I moved the prop toward TDC, feeling the pressure build (and the gauge shows pressure rising in the cylinder). Then release the prop and get a loud burp. If you can stand by the prop and see the cylinder head it's possible to do this as a one-person operation, but much easier with a helper!

Thanks for the information. I appreciate it.
 
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