Bruce Tuncks Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 Does anybody have a vacuum gauge among their engine instruments? They don't seem to be in use much, and I wonder why not. A change in vacuum readings, especially a sudden drop, could be the first indication of something wrong, such as an inlet manifold leak. The gauge would be easy to install if the tapping-point was just downstream of the carby. So there must be another reason why they are not widely used.
GraemeK Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 Isn't that what your MAP gauge reads? But instead of vacuum, it reads out in absolute pressure?
Bruce Tuncks Posted September 20, 2018 Author Posted September 20, 2018 Thanks guys. There is a whole lot of stuff out there on manifold pressures which is not relevant to my Jabiru. If I ever get a turbocharged constant-speed prop plane then there will be a lot for me to learn. In the meantime, the only use it would have in my Jabiru would be as a diagnostic tool. And you are right Graeme, it should not be called a vacuum gauge at all.
jetboy Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 I put one on my 2200 to measure the prop load vs rpm temporarily. You just remove a small screw from the middle of a port on the carb underside and place the hose there. It doesnt matter what type of gauge you use if you convert the units of scale. I just borrowed a gauge from a set of 4 carb balancing ones from a m/cycle supplier, these come with a damping valve fitted so you can remove the chatter, depending on what you are trying to use it for. they are compound gauges, not sure why for m/cycle tuning because bikes dont usually have turbos. Bought the gauges because the cars i was working on needed 4 carbs balanced - Honda S600 & H1300 Coupe 1
Thruster88 Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 Does anybody have a vacuum gauge among their engine instruments? They don't seem to be in use much, and I wonder why not.A change in vacuum readings, especially a sudden drop, could be the first indication of something wrong, such as an inlet manifold leak. The gauge would be easy to install if the tapping-point was just downstream of the carby. So there must be another reason why they are not widely used. Your ear should alert you to a sudden drop in map, absolute power in a fixed pitch prop airplane that's the tachometer. 1
Yenn Posted September 21, 2018 Posted September 21, 2018 Most of the time when flying the vacuum gauge would read very little vacuum, which is the same as a high manifold pressure. When I was a motor mechanic many years ago I always had a vacuum gauge in my toolkit as it was a very good diagnostic tool. I still have one, buthave never bothered to connect it to an aero engine. I find now that the EGT on every cylinder is a good diagnostic tool. On my first or second flight using a lycoming o-320, I had misfire while running up prior to take off. The EGTs let me pinpoint which plug had been at fault. 1
facthunter Posted September 21, 2018 Posted September 21, 2018 If you have a manifold leak it will be most obvious at idle when the vacuum is higher and gas (airmass) flow least. If you have a supercharged engine set the MP to the pressure height and no leaks happen. You need a damper (small orifice restriction) sometimes or the needle is a blurr, from pulses, especially on the 2 carb layout on the 912 Rotax.. MP is only low (High vacuum though it's nowhere near a vacuum) at idle with no load. It's an indication of a good engine to a point academically. It's no real value though in the big scheme of things. It can show your valve timing is out. I recall. Nev
skippydiesel Posted October 2, 2018 Posted October 2, 2018 Very easy to fit to the Rotax 912/914 range, as a factory fitted vacuum spigot is already mounted on the carbi balance tube.
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