cubscout wrote:There's no factory data for how that correlates to actual CHT, so flaky data point. The SkyRanch engine manual has a decent discussion of this issue.
Well... take this with a grain of salt... but this comes from personal experience: The CHT on the hottest cylinder on an A-65 Continental, in a relatively stock Taylorcrtaft, on climbout on a warm day - can read 450F. I had one of the few T-crafts with a four-probe CHT installed. I am certain that this is one of the reasons they did not offer CHT's in T-crafts.
Take this with a grain of salt too, but again this is personal experience: The Continental O-200 cylinder will live approximately four minutes above 550 degrees F, and fail catastrophically at 625 degrees F, when flying at approximately fifteen feet AGL and 240 miles per hour in loose formation with seven other experimental aircraft, in the immediate vicinity of Stead airfield in waivered airspace. This is not a recommended procedure for recreational flying
IMHO the target CHT for the small Continental engines should be about 350 to 375 F. A
little more than that on climbout on a warm day is completely acceptable and safe, so long as you have oil temperatures below 240F to prevent the oil's lubricating properties from breaking down. Unfortunately, the sparkplug type CHT gauges are notorious for reading incorrectly. So in my experiments I used the "temp-a-dot" stock on dots that change color with temp. And I found that the hot cylinder was indeed hot... reaching well over 400 F.
The problem is that most of these little airplanes have marginal cooling system designs. The place where the cooling air comes in, and goes out, are far far less than ideal. You have a lot less flow-through than you need to absorb and carry away the heat. If anyone is having serious heating problems, and is more concerned with solving the cooling issue than the paperwork issue, I can tell you how to solve it. But you're on your own with the paper.