So, I made it down to pick my plane up from having a cylinder overhualed yesterday and, about 30-40 minutes out from landing, I had an issue. My fuel flow slowing starting to decrease and I'd see the CHT on my new cylinder starting to increase. So, I would increase the mixture to maintain control of the cylinder temps. Well, this continued until I had full mixture and the max fuel flow I was getting was around 14 gph. Normal should be more like 23 gph. Last fall at annual we adjusted the fuel flow and it was dead on when we finished. At takeoff from Montrose, everything functioned normally and readings were normal. For the cylinder breakin, I was running full RPM and cowl flaps open (due to the warmer temps and to help keep cylinder temps in check). I had followed the breakin procedure of 75% BHP for the first hour, then alternating between 65% and 75% every 20 minutes thereafter. Total flight time was 3.4 hours and I was in the alternating phase when this occurred. Luckily, when I reached full rich and the CHT was starting to increase, it was time to descend and I was able to keep it from continuing to climb by reducing power for the descent.
I met with my mechanic this morning and all the settings on the fuel pump hadn't moved. No issue with the mixture control was apparent. He is thinking that it could be the engine driven fuel pump, but he's scratching his head because he's never heard of one failing. And there there is the question of whether or not something like that can "soft" fail...or if it's an all or nothing. I pulled the data and EGTs remained normal througout that time period. It doesn't appear to be a distribution issue, but a flow issue. Both the analog and digital fuel flow reflected roughly the same when I noticed the 14 gph. A static run on the ground maxed out around 13 gph with full rich.
So, any thoughts? I'm really bummed because my mechanic is headed out of town for 2 weeks and, unless I can come up with another option, it looks like I might be grounded until mid July! Sigh...



