It seems to me that the rings have not seated yet.
The blowby heats up the oil, hence also the consumption.
Advancing the baffling makes no difference here since the cylinders itself are 
running cool.
You proofed that already. The only thing to do is keep running it hard to 
finally seat the rings. 
All that provided, the engine is running fine otherwise.
If the situation gets worse, the only thing left is to pull the cylinders and 
to hone them again and try the whole running in procedure ones more with a new 
set of rings.

Hartmut



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: bcflyer2003 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, May 09, 2008 9:15 PM
  Subject: [ercoupe-tech] High Oil Temp


  I know this topic has a number of threads in the data base. I have 
  read most and still have questions. The 46 Ercoupe I bought in 
  December was topped in August 2007. The cylinders are Gibson's 
  at .015" over. New pistons and rings..also .015" over were used in the 
  top OH.The major was done in 1981 so the bottom has years on it, but 
  only 154 hrs. Total time on the engine is 2766 hrs.. The oil pressure 
  runs 35 psi except when at idle and warm when it is 10+ psi. The top 
  was done because of high oil consumption at 2 hrs. per quart. The 
  engine TOH now has 50 hrs on it. 
  Before the TOH, oil temp never ran hotter than 180 even on the hotest 
  day according to the previous owner.
  At this point, the oil temp runs 205 to 210 on a 75 to 80 deg. day. 
  Oil use is 4.5 hrs per quart. There are some oil leaks, but none that 
  I would consider extreme.
  The temp gage has been checked and reads high so I see 215 when I 
  report it is 205 accounting for a 10 degree bias in the gage. 
  Basically, the oil temp is 35-40 degrees hotter than before the Top OH.
  I have tighted up on air leaks on the baffles, closed the gap on the 
  air intake to carb. and plenum to the bottom of cowl. Intalled an oil 
  filter with cool air duct from the plenum blowing on the oil filter 
  assembly for cooling. Checked the mixture control to be certain the 
  engine is running rich of peak. These changes and others I'll not 
  mention, have had absolutly no effect on the oil temp. The only way 
  the oil temp stays below 200 is at idle. I don't have enought thermals 
  to do this for long.
  I borrowed a cylinder head temp gage and hooked it to the #1 cylinder 
  which I believe to be the hottest, and the cylinder temp never goes 
  above 350. I will be moving the sensor to the other cylinders to find 
  the hottest for certain. 
  From all of this and discussions with others, I conclude the only 
  possible cause of the high oil temp can be that 1 or more cylinders 
  are blowing by. All compressions are 75+ so can't decide if it's one 
  or all.
  I have decided to continue to fly the plane every day and continue to 
  observe temps. I have no illusions this will heal itself, but do not 
  believe any damage will result or undue risk is involved in using the 
  plane for cross country flight.
  If any of you have suggestions, advice, or questions, please advise.

  Bill Chalker
  N94191



   

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