Since it’s been so
quiet lately.
I had a complete
loss of engine power yesterday during climb out from Tyler TX (KTYR). I had
executed a Vx climb to see you hot I could get the oil with the supplemental
oil cool I recently added. The engine was running but stopped making any power.
I switch fuel tanks, adjusted the mixture both directions, toggled the primary
injector switch for cold start and check my breakers. I did everything but
switch to the B controller. All the troubleshooting took place in about 10
seconds or less. At that time my AOA starting telling me “angle, angle, push,
push” . Glad I had the AOA as I’m not sure my attention was focused on the
right priorities. I told the tower I had an engine failure and was landing. 35.
Very happy this happened at an airport with three long runways with different
headings. I pointed the nose down and made a right turn to the runway. The
landing was downwind with 15 knot wind. I was too fast and used all 3500ft I
had left. I coasted onto a taxiway with the engine idling very rough. I
couldn’t make enough power to taxi. The FBO was there within two minutes and
towed me back to their hanger. At this point I figured I had lost an apex
seals. I pulled the prop through but had good compression. I pulled the cowl
and everything was in place. Up until now I had remained very calm but that
changed when I realized there was no smoking gun. I checked my injector power
connections at the switches but everything seem good. The EC2 coil test worked
but the injector test did not. I attempted an engine start and it ran normally.
“What the h***” I later realized I had not activated the cold start switch for
the injector test. Injectors tested fine. I was at a complete loss as what to
look at next. I thought about a CAS intermediate failure but nothing I could
come up with fit the problem. After another five minute full power run to 38”MP
on both controllers I rolled the plane back into the FBO’s hanger and took a
break. So here I am 200 miles from home after a forced landing and the plane is
making full power as usual. Now the nerves set in full force. It downed on me
to check the muffler for blockage. From what I could see with a flashlight the
cone in my HushpowerII was out of place. I dropped the muffler from the belly
and about a ½” cup of material came out. It was small pieces of mess from the
cone. About 1/3 of the entrance side cone was still intact but the rest was
gone. The internal steel support that forms the cone was still intact but
movable with a large screw driver. I knocked as much out as I could and
reinstalled the muffler. I was unable to knock out any of the mesh that was
still in place. I decided to conduct a flight test over the airport for ten
minutes. If all was good then I would head for home and climb to 8500 for the
trip back. The headwind at 8500 would add 20 minutes to the flight unless I ran
the engine above 30” MP. I didn’t think it was a good time to stress the
muffler any more than necessary. I took off and climbed to 3000 ft on the B
controller and circled for several laps. I switched controllers, fuel, injector
cold start, coils and everything was normal. So I nervously departed for the
200 mile trip. I picked up flight following and had the autopilot/ flight
director take me home. I spent the entire flight with the nearest airport
active on my Advanced EFIS moving map. It draws a line, gives a distance and
runway lengths. I also check airport information on my ipad and Foreflight. The
flight was uneventful but was the most stressful I have ever experienced.
I’m guessing the
muffler internals came loose and slid rearward trapping all the small come
material that was dislodged. I was somewhere between Vx and Vy at a very high
angle of attack when the problem occurred. The muffler is parallel l with the
bottom of the fuselage so I believe any small dislodged material would remain
inside the muffler. The plan now is to go through the entire electrical system
and check every connection associated with the EC2 and fuel delivery. I will
also be looking for a different muffle and putting the plane back into flight
testing until I can regain my confidence with the install. I am also very
thankful none of my family was onboard. My teenage daughter had decided she
didn’t want to spend the remainder of spring break with me visiting my sister.
Bobby Hughes
(shaken not
stirred)---- check your mufflers!!!!