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Aircraft Maintenance: Reaming, lapping, other valve tasks

Exhaust valves are often the engine's weak link

If there is a universally weak link in aircraft cylinders, it seems to be the exhaust valves. This shouldn’t come as a surprise as the exhaust valve functions in the most extreme environment inside your engine.

Lead deposited (and circled) on the exhaust valve in this borescope image prevented the valve from sealing. Photo courtesy of David Pasquale.

Exhaust valves need to seal when closed, and open up to allow corrosive and lead-laden combustion gases to pass through at temperatures that can exceed 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. In order to survive this environment, the exhaust valve needs to conduct heat away from the valve. It also needs to rotate with each open/close cycle to even out wear and help reduce lead and other deposits from accumulating on the seating surfaces.

Continental and Lycoming each take a different design approach to coping with the heat and rotational needs of the valve. Continental engines utilize a solid exhaust valve that is designed to dissipate heat primarily through its contact with the valve seat. This is why the quality and amount of exhaust valve contact surface is so critical on Continental engines. Continental employs special “Rotocoils” on top of the exhaust valve springs that look like large washers, but have encapsulated springs that create rotation with every valve stroke.

A lapped valve should seal properly once the contaminants have been removed. Photo courtesy of David Pasquale.

Lycoming engines utilize sodium-filled exhaust valves that efficiently conduct the heat to the valve stem, where it is designed to dissipate primarily through the exhaust valve guide. This is why exhaust valve-to-guide clearances are so critical on Lycoming engines. To ensure rotation on Lycoming engines, the top of the valve stem is pressed off center by the rocker, creating an asymmetric “turning” force that rotates the valve with each stroke.

Continental exhaust valve maintenance

Having low compression with air leaking that can be heard at the exhaust pipe is often the first signal that there is a problem with an exhaust valve. However, with the aid of a borescope you can usually identify issues early on, before they require more serious intervention. You want to look for an uneven heat signature (coloration) on the face of the valve. The colors and buildup should appear circular and uniform to the valve. Any variation from a perfectly circular heat signature should be investigated further.

Anything other than a perfectly circular heat signature should be investigated further. Photo courtesy of David Pasquale.

It is also important to ensure that the valves are rotating properly. You can test this with the rocker removed by carefully tapping the valve stem with a non-marring mallet to watch the valve rotation. If the valve has only a minor uneven heat signature and you don’t see rotation with the tap test, you should replace the Rotocoil, fly, and see if the heat signature returns to normal. If the valve and seat show signs of leakage, the next step is to lap the valve to remove the contaminants and restore the mating surfaces. The basic process is as follows:

  1. Remove exhaust (if required), valve cover, rocker arm, Rotocoil (for Continental), and valve springs.
  2. Apply a dab of valve grinding compound to edge of valve through the upper spark plug hole (both plugs removed).
  3. Using small hose clamps, attach clear tubing between the end of the valve stem and a short dowel that can be chucked in a drill at the other end of the tube.
  4. Using a cordless drill, slowly turn the dowel while pulling the valve carefully back against the seat (alternate in both directions). (Do not allow to chatter, and apply more compound as needed.)
  5. Using a solvent or avgas, clean off the surfaces of the valve and seat. Inspect and repeat the process until you have a uniform mating surface on both the valve and seat.
  6. Completely flush out compound, reassemble, ground-run, and repeat a compression check to confirm improvement.

NOTE: You should always replace the Rotocoils when working on valves on Continental engines. It’s very inexpensive insurance.

Lycoming exhaust valve maintenance

On Lycoming exhaust valves, the highest risk is having a valve stem to valve guide clearance that is either too loose or too tight. If it is too loose, the valve will wander in the guide and not seat consistently (causing accelerated wear of the stem, guide, and seat). If the valve stem is too tight in the guide (often from baked-on oil and carbon deposits), the valve can stick open. This is most commonly observed on the first flight of the day and is often referred to as Lycoming “morning sickness.”

A sticking valve can be very dangerous as it could allow the piston to strike the valve, destroying one or both of them. Several engine failures have been attributed to sticking valves. Fortunately, Lycoming has a solution in the form of Service Bulletin No. 388C, which is a critical procedure that should be performed at a minimum of every 400 hours (I would probably do it more frequently). It’s a simple procedure that doesn’t require much more than removing the valve covers and using a special tool to check the “wobble” of the valve stem in the guide.

If the valve clearance is too loose, the cylinder has to be removed to replace the guide. If it’s too tight, you can ream the guide without removing the cylinder. If your mechanic doesn’t have the special tool, buy it for them or get another mechanic. It’s that important.

Proactive inspection and maintenance of exhaust valves can dramatically reduce the likelihood of needing to remove a cylinder. Experts such as Mike Busch have written volumes about how to interpret borescope images of exhaust valves, and the key in all cases is to identify issues early on, when a minimal amount of intervention will have the maximum effect. If you borescope your cylinders annually and follow Service Bulletin No. 388C (for Lycomings), you should be able to catch most exhaust issues early enough to use Rotocoil replacement, valve lapping, or guide reaming to get your aircraft safely back in the air without cylinder removal. Until next time, I hope you and your families remain safe and healthy, and I wish you blue skies.

Jeff Simon
Jeff Simon
Jeff Simon is an A&P mechanic, IA, pilot, and aircraft owner. He has spent the last 22 years promoting owner-assisted aircraft maintenance and created the first inspection tool for geared alternator couplings available at ApproachAviation.com. Jeff is also the creator of SocialFlight, the free mobile app and website that maps more than 20,000 aviation events, hundred-dollar hamburger destinations, and also offers educational aviation videos. Free apps are available for iOS and Android devices, and users can also visit www.SocialFlight.com.
Topics: Ownership, Aircraft Maintenance
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