jcadwell wrote:I've got the IO470 in my 205, and CHT spread is perhaps 50 degrees max under cruise or climb. I don't like to run over 400F, or under 300F. Too hot weakens the aluminum and decreases detonation margin. Too cool increases lead problems (sticky valves, fouling, etc). If I can get 350 in cruise across the board I'm happy.
Cylinder #1 is always the hottest (front left, gets the least cooling air being on the upstroke of the propeller). Excluding cylinder 6, I'd say your spread looks normal. If cylinder 6 was 314F, I'd say look at your baffling. At 214F, you have a problem. I'd look at a few things: 1) CHT probe. Either swap with another to confirm, or just replace it. 2) Injector clogged. Given that you just had them serviced, look there. 3) Manifold induction leak on one cylinder.
Do you monitor EGT's as well? If your cylinder #6 EGT is similar to the other cylinders (within 150F?), you probably have a CHT probe problem. If the EGT is way different, look at injector or leaking manifold.
I'll put my money on the CHT probe. If it's an injector or manifold leak, I'd think it wouldn't be running very well, and you'd notice.
On a IO-470 #1 cylinder is actually rear right. So if yours is the hottest you may have a baffling issue JC. I do agree that under 400 and over 300 is ideal. My 206 with a 520 usually runs about 360 max on cyls 3-6. 1 and 2 run cooler when I'm running LOP, about 280-290.
I find #6 can be tough to get hot enough as it is the front left and can often get too much airflow. Make sure they put all the baffling back on properly after annual. There should be a partial plate in front of #6 as it gets lots of air normally. #5 is behind the cooler and has a tendency to run hotter the #6 because of the cooler. First thing I'd do is swap the probe to a different location and see if the issue follows the probe.
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