ORIGINAL: Trisquire
I had a thought in reference to bench running. How is a tied down airplane any different from a bench run? I mean, tie your plane securely to a bench, up out the dirt. Okay, you're exposing your radio equipment to so some unneeded vibration.
The thing is, the carburetor/tank relationship effects tuning. If you run an engine on a bench, you've already established one engine/tank relationship, and you've tuned accordingly. When you transfer the engine to the plane, you can try your best to get the tank on the same level. Invariably, the setup will differ in some subtle way, and you'll have to retune all over again. You're duplicating your efforts. Why not establish the correct carburetor/tank relationship once, in the plane, and then leave the mixture alone forever? Its one less variable to contend with.
Tom
Tom I totally agree with you here, when I run the initial tank or 2 on the ground I make sure the plane is up off the ground and the radio is off, unless im changeing the RPM's. Things have changed alot from the old days of the Fox and K&B engines where a long breakin was required. Todays engines are not only made from different materials but made better in many ways , in short things fit when new.