I'm not familiar with the Aero carb, but carburated engines (4 or 6 cyl) can have quite a bit of variation in fuel distribution between fwd and aft cylinders depending on the throttle position (throttle plate acts like a flow control deflector) and the performance of a particular carburetor.I was curious if anyone else was having cylinder overheating issues with an aero carb on the O-540 lycoming. This is the front two cylinders and they should get plenty of air. I have replaced the baffles.
I'm not familiar with the Aero carb, but carburated engines (4 or 6 cyl) can have quite a bit of variation in fuel distribution between fwd and aft cylinders depending on the throttle position (throttle plate acts like a flow control deflector) and the performance of a particular carburetor.
In cruise flight I can tweek the EGT's on my carbed four cyl to have a very tight spread by moving the throttle small amounts.
Assuming all of the baffling is installed and performing correctly, the issue is probably related to fuel distribution.
It is hard to comment further without more details (flight conditions it occurs, throttle and mixture setting, etc.
Pics might help of the front cylinder air dams, baffles and other holes (oil cooler, heat muffs, blast tubes, leaks) created in the baffle area that reduce pressure.I was curious if anyone else was having cylinder overheating issues with an aero carb on the O-540 lycoming. This is the front two cylinders and they should get plenty of air. I have replaced the baffles.
What makes you think 450* chts is due to a fuel issue? At 20” of map, no mixture from extreme lean to extreme rich is going to cause 450*, with all other things normal. Top suspects are excessive ignition advance and blockage or obstruction of cooling air. Detonation highly unlikely at 20”During cruise there is definitely a fuel issue I'm thinking. I can barely run 20 map without seeing temps between 420s and 450s. Had the baffles professionally replaced.