The thing is Lynn, I had not changed any switches in at least 15+ min. of flight, did not even move the mixture knob, I have manual flaps, fixed landing gear & did not change the prop yet, that is what that flight was going to be for testing full cruise pitch speeds. I have my complete schematic of the aircraft drawn out on a large poster board & will go through to look for ideas with Tracy's new info & guidelines. David
From: Lehanover@aol.comTo: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <
flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Thursday, August 22, 2013 10:33:36 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Fuel map scrambled.
A review of switching systems is in order. Not only will the
inductive load of the solenoid primary generate destructive voltages, as in a
Kettering style field collapse, also the contactors in the solenoids can provide
a dirty arcing when opening. Common switches as well may produce an electrically
noisy opening. In modern electronics time periods, the operation of a common
switch looks like a week long electrical storm. Diodes and capacitors across the
contacts are used to silence such noise.
Lynn E. Hanover
Bobby,
my map is ( was ) still set to factory with all bars in the center, after
landing I thought to check EM2 screen with mapping bars & discovered half
were still at center & half were all the way to the bottom/lean. I
had not changed anything for aprox. 15 min. of flight, then suddenly ruff
running. I just responded to Mark & mentioned that the only thing
diff. from prev. 10 hrs. was I had both landing & taxi lights on this
flight. David