WRCS logo

Warringah Radio Control Society

PO Box 633, St Ives, NSW, 2075

 

Events

Sat Mar 14 @ 8:00AM - 05:00PM
CMAC Scale Rally - Canberra
Sun Mar 15 @ 8:00AM - 05:00PM
CMAC Scale Rally - Canberra
Sun Mar 22 @ 9:00AM - 05:00PM
Autumn Scale Day
Tue Apr 07 @ 7:30PM - 09:00PM
Club night
Fri Apr 10 @ 8:00AM - 05:00PM
Good Friday
Mon Apr 13 @ 8:00AM - 05:00PM
Easter Monday
Sat Apr 25 @ 8:00AM - 05:00PM
Anzac Day
Sat May 02 @ 9:00AM - 05:00PM
Wings Over Illawarra
Sun May 03 @ 9:00AM - 05:00PM
Wings Over Illawarra

Weather Watch

BOM Radar: Click HERE
BOM latest observations: Click HERE
BOM forecast: Click HERE

 

The "ignition system" in our engines is in the main. the glow plug. The other vital ingredient - compression - actually determines the ignition timing. so it can't be totally ignored. But usually its the plug that gives us the problems.

Why DO glow plugs fail? There are four likely probabilities, five if you count old age.

Yes, old age! The plugs operate by using a catalytic (chemical) reaction with the alcohol in our fuel to maintain their heat, as the plug gets "old", it gets more and more covered up with combustion by products (carbon. etc.) which hinders the whole process.

Of the other four, LEAN RUNS is probably the most prevalent - not so much that the engine was running lean as it was HOT. Too much heat, and the element fries and shatters, or even melts.

TOO MUCH BATTERY power is another failure mode - very related to the above paragraph. Your battery should heat the plug to a nice bright orange or red orange colour: if the plug glows white hot it just isn't going to last. It's bad enough that we subject a tiny little element glowing hot to the pressures of combustion. But if we add more VIBRATION to the situation. we get trouble. Unbalanced props, loose engine mounts. etc. may all add up to plug failure, especially in combination with too much heat.

Another plug failure mode is from FOULING. The element is very small, and located down in a well. It doesn't take much trash flying around in your combustion chamber to foul (and ruin) the plug! Aside from the obvious dirt coming through the intake or with the fuel. the fouling can come from metallic sources, usually a result of bearings coming unglued, or from excess carbon deposits in the engine. If the combustion chamber is full of caked-on carbon. pieces of that can, and do, come adrift and end up fouling the plug!

A quality plug run in a sport engine should last for dozens of flights. If they don't, its probably not the fault of the plugs - its time to look elsewhere for the source of the REAL problem!

Copyright © 2011. All Rights Reserved.