Finishing my PPL, buying a plane, modifying a plane and flying a bit then putting it on floats and learning to fly again all in a fairly short period of time pretty much maxed my ability to take on new information. I learned things that had to be learned and didn't dig much deeper.
One of the things I 'learned' was to always ensure the engine was full rich on final. I assumed it was so I would make full power on a go-round. My engine runs too rich when I pull carb heat with the mixture full rich so I got in the habit of pulling carb heat on downwind with the mixture still lean, then pushing in carb heat just before richness on final.
Over the winter I've been trying to read and learn and have read quite a bit about leaning. Turns out, lots of engines make better power when they are leaned and the reason for full rich on final is more about engine cooling than making full power. I wish I had learned that before I was struggling to take off a small-ish lake at 6000' DA last fall.
I've taken the first free chapter on the engine monitor class from Advanced Pilots Seminar that JP256 recommended and they are huge proponents of the benefits of leaning. I'm curious about the habits of other P-Ponk drivers.
- Anybody run LOP?
- Anybody do their runup with engine leaned?
- What situations merit taking off with the engine leaned?
- Is it safer to land lean with carb heat on, or with a carb heat check on downwind and a full rich, no carb heat landing?
Last, for anybody with an EDM-900 monitor, is the LeanFind function significantly different than my current method of leaning until EGT hits 1500?
I've never had carb ice and have never seen cylinder head temps too hot. I use methods recommended in the P-Ponk operating thread: full throttle, full rpm for takeoff, rpm back to 2500 for climb, then throttle and rpm back for cruise with engine leaned until EGT is around 1500.
Any advice appreciated. Allan

