Look in pic in post 37. There is heavy wear on the piston, just below the oil ring land and this lines up with the wear on the cylinder . There is .004”+ of clearance between piston ond cylinder wall, so something in the ring area was was too tight on the opposite side that was forcing the pisto against the wall. I still think your issue is too small a clearance in the ring land or ring fit up issue, like ring upside down or badd machining in the lands. I suspect if you try to push each of the rings in fully and go all the way around the piston, you will find an area where the ring protrudes past the pistons edge.I have an update on this and I'd also like opinions from you all.
After tearing down the engine, I found the thrust face on the crankcase was torn up from metal circulating in there, and the crank had damage. I sent the cases back to Divco and the crank back to Aircraft Specialties (returned the rods too for inspection and yellow tag again).
Divco repaired the thrust face within a week and I have the cases back already - only charged me $500 to boot. Very pleased with this.
Aircraft Specialties sorted the crank... but accidentally polished the already minimum size oil seal area, so that crank is now scrap. They have told me they will find me a replacement crank at their cost, so I will just pay the repair fee. It's a shame but at least I'm not out of pocket.
As for Lycon, well because I bought new Lycoming cylinders they said they'd port and polish these at no charge for the time being, while they deal with the damaged Superiors. Also they asked for the carb so they can check it's flowing enough fuel. My carb is a 10-3678-32 which has the highest flow available for an O320 and takeoff fuel flow was 13.7GPH.
Anyway, I shipped them the 4 damaged superior cylinders and the 4 new Lyc ones... which sat in customs for 3 weeks [ed. Deleted the rest of the sentence as it was politics. Please read the posting rules. V/r,dr]. They finally arrived at Lycon a couple weeks ago. I've had to chase a bit to get updates, but they told me the following:
- The new cylinders are nearly done and should be finished this week. All good with me, no problems there.
- The Superior cylinders (damaged ones) had the "darkest combustion chambers they've seen". Strange, but they were burning oil, and only 4 hours run time, so doesn't surprise me personally?
- They have not provided any opinion on what happened with the Superiors, nor have they sent the cylinders to Superior. They've sent the cylinders to an "outside engineering company for evaluation, before sending to the manufacturer". I don't know who this engineering company is. I asked Lycon why was this necessary, since Lycon see loads of cylinders, but haven't received a straight answer.
I am surprised because I expected Lycon to want to return the cylinders to Superior ASAP and make it Superior's problem to deal with. Maybe they are concerned that they screwed up a ring gap and don't want Superior to know? Right now I guess they are being careful to not offer any suggestions as to what's gone wrong in case they say anything that might make them liable for the failure.
Bottom line is I need to get the engine back together but I also need to find out what caused this problem and depending on the outcome, who's going to pay for all of this. Anyone have any thoughts as to what's going on, and what I should be expecting? This whole experience is just strange. I run a company that repairs drones, so I'm not new to customer service in this type of work, and we do our best to keep customers in the loop with all information, good or bad, it just makes the whole process so much easier for everyone.
You can see in post #37 that the main damage is from the top piston ring, and it's remarkably similar to Mike's damage in post #88. Maybe Superior aren't hardening these cylinders properly?
I am sure they are a bit cagey, as this is either something they did, or should have caught while assembling.
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