Noah
Well Known Member
Doing a compression check, I heard air escaping and had trouble sealing the pneumatic fitting in the spark plug port. Careful inspection showed a scratch or dent in the cylinder head, just adjacent to the spark plug port, where the gasket goes - hissing and bubbling with snoop leak detector.
Lycoming SSP384 (https://www.lycoming.com/sites/default/files/attachments/SSP-384%202nd%20Edition.pdf)
specifies Special Service Tools, and tool ST-369 shows a shaft with threads that screws into the spark plug port. A counterbore (ST-370) fits over the pilot to maintain alignment when the tool is cutting what Lycoming refers to as the "Spark Plug Pad", or sealing countersurface for the spark plug gasket. Service Letter L234B ("Tool Rental Program", https://www.lycoming.com/sites/default/files/attachments/Tool%20Rental%20Program.pdf) says to contact a Lycoming distributor to arrange for tool rental.
Has anybody had success doing this? I spoke to several distributors but have not gotten any traction. Were rental prices reasonable? If so, what distributor did you go through?
Aircraft Spruce is listed as a Lycoming distributor but the person I spoke with never heard of Lycoming's tool rental program & hasn't gotten back to me.
Has anybody experienced a leak like this? Material removal / spark plug pad cleanup using the proper tools seems like the best option but if I can't ge these tools, is Liquid Metal a reasonable alternate? Red RTV? Its a small leak and its probably been leaking awhile so I don't think it would be a huge deal if the sealant failed. I really don't want to remove the cylinder and send it off for service.
Thoughts? Thanks very much.
Lycoming SSP384 (https://www.lycoming.com/sites/default/files/attachments/SSP-384%202nd%20Edition.pdf)
specifies Special Service Tools, and tool ST-369 shows a shaft with threads that screws into the spark plug port. A counterbore (ST-370) fits over the pilot to maintain alignment when the tool is cutting what Lycoming refers to as the "Spark Plug Pad", or sealing countersurface for the spark plug gasket. Service Letter L234B ("Tool Rental Program", https://www.lycoming.com/sites/default/files/attachments/Tool%20Rental%20Program.pdf) says to contact a Lycoming distributor to arrange for tool rental.
Has anybody had success doing this? I spoke to several distributors but have not gotten any traction. Were rental prices reasonable? If so, what distributor did you go through?
Aircraft Spruce is listed as a Lycoming distributor but the person I spoke with never heard of Lycoming's tool rental program & hasn't gotten back to me.
Has anybody experienced a leak like this? Material removal / spark plug pad cleanup using the proper tools seems like the best option but if I can't ge these tools, is Liquid Metal a reasonable alternate? Red RTV? Its a small leak and its probably been leaking awhile so I don't think it would be a huge deal if the sealant failed. I really don't want to remove the cylinder and send it off for service.
Thoughts? Thanks very much.