Robert,
One thing that would do that is
ignition timing. When ignition timing retards, the TIT will
increase. If one ignition is dropping out under load, that will
effectively retard the combustion and have the same effect. Run a
mag check at cruise and while LOP. Make sure all EGT’s climb
slightly. If that is checks OK, I would have the timing checked on both
systems. In my opinion one gallon per hour is more than a change in air
temp. Also, the air temp in November should be cooler than it was in
July. That “should” have the effect of requiring more fuel and the plane
going faster, not what you have described.
Or it could be like my plane….it
won’t be happy until you spend some money on it. For reference, When I
lean to 75 degF LOP on my TNIO550 it is….1550 TIT, 16.4 to 17.0 gph, 30 inHg and
2500 RPM. This is in a Bonanza with non-crossflow heads. This engine
has 8.5 to 1 compression ratio, so the max TIT will be lower than a stock
TSIO550.
Craig Berland
I am
running a TSIO550-EXP with one Lightspeed Plasma III and one mag.
For a year
I would climb to cruise altitude, pull back to 32 inches and
2450 rpm, lean
to 17.3 gph, and go merrily on my way. EGTs were
1550-ish, TITs were
1580-1620, and CHT varied with the season (390 in
the summer and 350 in
cooler times). However about 4 months ago my EGTs
began to increase and with
them the TITs. Now to keep TIT below 1625 I
must lean back to 16.3 - 16.5
gph, and that yields a slower TAS.
Anyone suggest a cause and cure? Robert M. Simon
ES-P
N301ES