"It's in your head" episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 1, 2026 · 52 MIN

"It's in your head"

from Ask the A&Ps · host AOPA

Very cold cylinders, sort of warm cylinders, turbochargers, and pressurized mags are on tap for this episode. Email [email protected] for a chance to get on the show. Join the world's largest aviation community at aopa.org/join Full episode notes below: Bill has a Cessna 182S with the Lycoming IO-540 and he has a temperature issue with his number 2 cylinder. Climbing out at full rich he would back up the mixture a bit at 1,000 or 2,000 feet and the CHT would climb to about 405. By going full rich again he can keep it below 400 degrees. Mike said the problem is totally in Bill's head. A CHT of 405 is a perfectly respectable temperature for a Lycoming. The redline on the cylinder is 500 degrees, so there's no need to worry about 405. Mike recommends keeping Lycoming cylinders below about 420 degrees. Daniel has a Columbia 400 with a TSIO-550. He's been thinking about how car turbochargers don't have enough exhaust gas pressure to start working until a few thousand RPM and he's wondering if airplane turbos are the same. Paul said the waste gate closes immediately upon startup, so all the exhaust runs through the turbocharger from the beginning. Bob is wondering about corrosion on pressurized magnetos. Mike has previously explained that they are prone to corrosion because of water entering the system. Bob wonders if because the water entering the system can only be in the form of water vapor and because the vapor is coming from clouds, which are low in the contaminate that cause corrosion, if Mike might be overstating the problem. Mike doesn't disagree with Bob's theory, but in practice the issue is real and prevalent. Adam flies lean of peak in his Columbia and his CHTs can be as low as around 240 degrees and he's wondering if he's flying too cool and what he should do about it. Paul asks how far lean of peak he's flying. Adam thinks it's about 40 degrees, but at a fuel flow of 12.5 gallons per hour at an RPM of 2400. The hosts agree he's flying very lean. They recommend he try to fly about a gallon per hour more, which will get him a lot more speed and more normal temperatures.

Very cold cylinders, sort of warm cylinders, turbochargers, and pressurized mags are on tap for this episode. Email [email protected] for a chance to get on the show. Join the world's largest aviation community at aopa.org/join Full episode notes below: Bill has a Cessna 182S with the Lycoming IO-540 and he has a temperature issue with his number 2 cylinder. Climbing out at full rich he would back up the mixture a bit at 1,000 or 2,000 feet and the CHT would climb to about 405. By going full rich again he can keep it below 400 degrees. Mike said the problem is totally in Bill's head. A CHT of 405 is a perfectly respectable temperature for a Lycoming. The redline on the cylinder is 500 degrees, so there's no need to worry about 405. Mike recommends keeping Lycoming cylinders below about 420 degrees. Daniel has a Columbia 400 with a TSIO-550. He's been thinking about how car turbochargers don't have enough exhaust gas pressure to start working until a few thousand RPM and he's wondering if airplane turbos are the same. Paul said the waste gate closes immediately upon startup, so all the exhaust runs through the turbocharger from the beginning. Bob is wondering about corrosion on pressurized magnetos. Mike has previously explained that they are prone to corrosion because of water entering the system. Bob wonders if because the water entering the system can only be in the form of water vapor and because the vapor is coming from clouds, which are low in the contaminate that cause corrosion, if Mike might be overstating the problem. Mike doesn't disagree with Bob's theory, but in practice the issue is real and prevalent. Adam flies lean of peak in his Columbia and his CHTs can be as low as around 240 degrees and he's wondering if he's flying too cool and what he should do about it. Paul asks how far lean of peak he's flying. Adam thinks it's about 40 degrees, but at a fuel flow of 12.5 gallons per hour at an RPM of 2400. The hosts agree he's flying very lean. They recommend he try to fly about a gallon per hour more, which will get him a lot more speed and more normal temperatures.

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"It's in your head"

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This episode is 52 minutes long.

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This episode was published on July 1, 2026.

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Very cold cylinders, sort of warm cylinders, turbochargers, and pressurized mags are on tap for this episode. Email [email protected] for a chance to get on the show. Join the world's largest aviation community at aopa.org/join Full episode notes...

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