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ORIGINAL: blw
Artto,
Did you install a new ring? If not, I would run the first tank like any normal engine on the bench for a few minutes and listen to how it runs. Let it get good and warmed up. Run it like you would when flying. I wouldn't worry about WOT runs unless you have a new ring that needs to wear in. You may have pointed this out earlier and I didn't see it.
I use castor in everything. There's no reason to not use it and plenty of reasons why you should.
Artto,
Did you install a new ring? If not, I would run the first tank like any normal engine on the bench for a few minutes and listen to how it runs. Let it get good and warmed up. Run it like you would when flying. I wouldn't worry about WOT runs unless you have a new ring that needs to wear in. You may have pointed this out earlier and I didn't see it.
I use castor in everything. There's no reason to not use it and plenty of reasons why you should.
It's a new cylinder, piston, piston ring, connecting rod, camgear, both front and main bearing..
So virtually there isn't much left from the original engine.

Btw After the running-in phase I will be using Aerosave oil which is a high quality synthetic oil and popular here in Europe. The reason I'v been thinking of using castor for running in the engine is that the lubrication properties of Aerosave are so good that it takes forever to complete the running-in of a new engine.
My theory is that if you run the engine in at fairly rich needle settings the temps probably won't increse to the point the castor starts to burn onto the valves. This together with the fact that 40 minutes running is only about 4 tanks or so. Therefore, if the only disadvantage of using castor oil is sticky valves in the long run you can avoid this by switching to good quality synthetic after the ferst few original tanks with castor. The advantage with castor (as I see it) in running-in phase is the castor helps to keep the temperature down to avoid overheating and with castor the engine runs in faster than with modern high quality synthetic oils.
I''ll be glad to stand corrected if my theory fails completely in case someone has "been there, done that"

regatds Artto

I can't see a problem with castor oil maybe some tuners relied on it's never say die qualities to much,like to hear what dave thinks about that.

ORIGINAL: FNQFLYER
Old Fart, I have found that if any methanol / nitro mix is left in the crankcase and protection the castor is virtually non existant. I used to run castor in the 50 and the 65 and had no problems except for glazing and sticky valves if the engine is left for a while. With synthetic no problems, lean runs are of no real concern, in fact with engines going into storage we run the engines with a no nitro mix and lean run them to tank run out and then fill the crankcase with ATF.
Any way horses for courses and what suites is what you do. I have just put forward some points on ''supplied fuel'' for O/Timers to the MAAA rules committee and the need for total synthetic mixes (as per OS and Saito data to hand) to accomodate the needs of the modern breed of engines from both these manufacturers.
BTB I am relocating to the SE corner of QLD next month. Family reasons and the only good thing is that the ''old firm'' will be back in business big time and we are looking at pylon racing (Golden Era) the O/Timer events and Vintage A & B team race (control line). Going to be interesting to see how these real big Saitos go once we breath on them a little. I'll be flying at Calvert. Article on the field in latest Airborne (Gratton something, great field and great guys go there)
Old Fart, I have found that if any methanol / nitro mix is left in the crankcase and protection the castor is virtually non existant. I used to run castor in the 50 and the 65 and had no problems except for glazing and sticky valves if the engine is left for a while. With synthetic no problems, lean runs are of no real concern, in fact with engines going into storage we run the engines with a no nitro mix and lean run them to tank run out and then fill the crankcase with ATF.
Any way horses for courses and what suites is what you do. I have just put forward some points on ''supplied fuel'' for O/Timers to the MAAA rules committee and the need for total synthetic mixes (as per OS and Saito data to hand) to accomodate the needs of the modern breed of engines from both these manufacturers.
BTB I am relocating to the SE corner of QLD next month. Family reasons and the only good thing is that the ''old firm'' will be back in business big time and we are looking at pylon racing (Golden Era) the O/Timer events and Vintage A & B team race (control line). Going to be interesting to see how these real big Saitos go once we breath on them a little. I'll be flying at Calvert. Article on the field in latest Airborne (Gratton something, great field and great guys go there)


It seems to be many people are switching to stainless steel bearings after getting tired of changing bearings once in a season despite of use of after-run oil. This may be due to the poor quality of the original bearings of at least some models, such as FA-100 and FA-125a. How knows for sure? For some reason some people seem to be luckier than others..

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+1 on stainless steel bearings. I thought I did everything right with my Saito 65 but still ended up with notchy bearings after the first winter in storage. No problems once I went with a SS set from RC Bearings.
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Old fart, in Old timer flying, in the dark ages people used to have all sorts of "special fuels" most of which had nasties that caused cancer or were unobtainable by the general populance. So it was decided that in Texaco in particular (which is esstentially an economy test plus flying and model selection skill thing) that the combatants would have 2 choices, use Contest Director supplied fuel, and get a greater allocation per pound weight of the a/c, or you could use your own. All ok, castor based fuel was the order of the day with usually 10% nitro (or no nitro at all). The along came the "modern" Saitos and OS engines that specifically stated not to use castor and as I remember had recommended oil percentages for the fuel mix. Thus resulted the rule change that now has 3 fuels "supplied" by the CD. No nitro, Nitro with castor and Nitro with synthetic. The castor based fuels as falling out of favour. BTB we all use our own brews for Duration (vertical drag race) and diesel and of course the O&R and othefold sparkies.
Re the Golden Era racing the big Saitos in both petrol and glo are being looked at. I'll try to talk to Saito Japan before we make any move there, but I can tell you there is a Mew Gull made by the boys in Rocky that is waiting to be finished and fitted out. After the Gratton do the guy from Horizon Hobbies took 3 back to the States, at $1200 for just the base fuse and wing and tail feathers. They are that good and I gather 3 went to the UK
Re the Golden Era racing the big Saitos in both petrol and glo are being looked at. I'll try to talk to Saito Japan before we make any move there, but I can tell you there is a Mew Gull made by the boys in Rocky that is waiting to be finished and fitted out. After the Gratton do the guy from Horizon Hobbies took 3 back to the States, at $1200 for just the base fuse and wing and tail feathers. They are that good and I gather 3 went to the UK
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Re bearings, once I finish my relocation (2,000k's close to competitions and otherflying) I will be continuing with my investigations into ceramic bearings and pistons and needle roller bearing fit outs for survvability and increased performance. It has been an of and on again project of mine for the past couple of years. I like stainless but they require looking after if you use higher nitro content fuels

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Tom, several of the Saito needle valves are not needl;es at all, but are a sleeves that moves in and out over a cats eye in the spraybar. It indeed can be removed. Picture #1 is most likely what your 1.00 has and picture #2 is of an .80 LS needle.

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Hey OF, I've been in Fla. for about 8 days so I'm playing catch up. I am a fan of castor and have mentioned before that my Saito .80, 1.50 and my Enya .46MKII were all three ran on Fox 15% fuel with 20% castor for two seasons, three for the .80 with no caking, no coking on the valves, only the mufflers suffered some ugliness. I also ran some Fox 5% fuel with 20% 50/50 syn/castor blend for a while. I'm still convinced that castor is our friend.
As for bearings, I feel strongly that people change bearings way too often. Most will easily go 10 years unless using the green stuff.
As for bearings, I feel strongly that people change bearings way too often. Most will easily go 10 years unless using the green stuff.

I don't think the standard saito bearings are 'bad' especially in their bigger engines.My own problems stemmed from a lack of after run oil in the early days.Now i just squeeze an ounce of atf into the vent nipple and spin it up with the starter,never had any trouble since.

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Along the way I've used Corrosion X and now use NAPA Fogging Oil which costs about 1/5th as much as the CX. I also learned that WD 40 is worse than using nothing at all.

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I'm with you on the fogger idea. I just need to remember to stop in the NAPA place.
Castor takes more heat over synthetics, and doesn't turn to ash when over heated.
Castor takes more heat over synthetics, and doesn't turn to ash when over heated.

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A long time ago I did some comparisons and decided that ATF did not 'stick' to bearing surfaces well enough for me, as was confirmed by bad bearings. So I looked around until I found something that solved my problems AND was easy to find.
For more than 20 years I have been using Rislone as my after run oil in everything and my Saito's love it. What I like is to do is put some in the vent tube and prop the engine enough that it sucks the oil in. I tend to store my planes engine down which makes the oil run to the front bearing that rarely gets lubrication. The next time I go flying, the first run of the engine is a bit laggy and rich as it exhausts the excessive oil which tells me it stayed in the engine and protected the bearings.
I bought a quart 20 years ago and still have around 1/2 of it.
The ONLY Saito bearings I have ever had to replace because they were rough were also were involved in those sudden stops that accompany lawn darts.[:@]
YMMV
For more than 20 years I have been using Rislone as my after run oil in everything and my Saito's love it. What I like is to do is put some in the vent tube and prop the engine enough that it sucks the oil in. I tend to store my planes engine down which makes the oil run to the front bearing that rarely gets lubrication. The next time I go flying, the first run of the engine is a bit laggy and rich as it exhausts the excessive oil which tells me it stayed in the engine and protected the bearings.
I bought a quart 20 years ago and still have around 1/2 of it.
The ONLY Saito bearings I have ever had to replace because they were rough were also were involved in those sudden stops that accompany lawn darts.[:@]
YMMV
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Guys there are varying grades of ATF better look for MIL spec 5056 (red hydraulic oil) which is what I use. This was the original ATF before we all go smart. As a point I would never use the green Chev recommended (Holden to us) automatc gear box oil, full of nasties. Corrosion X should never be used any where it is subject to heat other than ambient (read the use specs) and please consider that any, repeat any,normal oil (even Klotz etc) is better than nothing after the days flying.
Re castor all that varnish plus the general glug left behind convinced me to move to synthetic mind you I still use it (castor) 4 stroke diesels.
As I said you use what suits you the best and so what if we disagree it all makes the world go round huh
BTB old fart we have blue skies again
Re castor all that varnish plus the general glug left behind convinced me to move to synthetic mind you I still use it (castor) 4 stroke diesels.
As I said you use what suits you the best and so what if we disagree it all makes the world go round huh
BTB old fart we have blue skies again

It's all thunderstorms and no flying here.Next time i go past repco or coventrys i'll look for that oil mate.I like the bronze colour you get from castor and it sure smells good,used to get spoon fed that stuff as a kid,wish mum could have added a bit of nitro to the mix.Hope the move is going well.
ps dave hope you had a good break mate,cheers
ps dave hope you had a good break mate,cheers

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Maybe my stock bearing problem might be I run 30% heli fuel. The stainless bearings hold up to my flying style and the stock does not. I use after run oil.

Lots of good info hear. I use 15% heli fuel but I'm not real good at using any kind of after run oil. I guess its something I should be doing or I will get good at replacing bearings.
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ORIGINAL: hsukaria
How do you inject oil into the vent tube? Do you use a syringe or a squeeze bulb?
How do you inject oil into the vent tube? Do you use a syringe or a squeeze bulb?
I bought a small plastic bottle of some sort of light oil several years ago.
It has a small tube within the spout tube that allows either inverted or upright dispensing depending on whether the inner end of the tube is pulled out to the spout or left @ the bottom of the bottle.
It is just the right size to insert into small fuel line tubing. I insert the tube into 1 end of the fuel line tubing & place the other end of the fule line tubing over the vent nipple. I then squeeze a few CCs of oil into the case as well as the ports.
I only use ARO when the engines are put up for the season or otherwise not going to be used for a while.
I use ATF.
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ORIGINAL: smkrcflyer
Lots of good info hear. I use 15% heli fuel but I'm not real good at using any kind of after run oil. I guess its something I should be doing or I will get good at replacing bearings.
Lots of good info hear. I use 15% heli fuel but I'm not real good at using any kind of after run oil. I guess its something I should be doing or I will get good at replacing bearings.
I only use ARO when the engines are put up for the season or otherwise not going to be used for a while.
I use Morgan Cool Power 15% full synthetic glow fuel.
Never any corrosion issues if I store my engine in a climate controled enviornment. (in the house) I have taken engines that were stored for 14 years out & put them into service W/nothing more than some oil injected into the case & turning the engines upside down & every-which-way to distribute the oil as well as rotating then crank to distribute the oil thoroughly.

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ORIGINAL: hsukaria
How do you inject oil into the vent tube? Do you use a syringe or a squeeze bulb?
How do you inject oil into the vent tube? Do you use a syringe or a squeeze bulb?
Hope that was descriptive enough.

ORIGINAL: Jim Branaum
I put a fuel tubing extension on it to get the waste away from the airframe if possible. When I am injecting the oil, I use a bottle (might have been an old after run oil bottle - I don't remember) that has a flip nipple on it and I put a chunk of 1/8 brass tubing into that and put that into the extension. That way I also can see the engine take the oil.
Hope that was descriptive enough.
ORIGINAL: hsukaria
How do you inject oil into the vent tube? Do you use a syringe or a squeeze bulb?
How do you inject oil into the vent tube? Do you use a syringe or a squeeze bulb?
Hope that was descriptive enough.
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Bearings: I have only had any sort of bearing problem (minimal) when using my models in the tropics and that I put down to humidity. I don't include any problems resulting from extreme use here. 30% Heli fuel (Powermaster mix using the low viscosity Klotz or Cool power oil can't remember which for the minute) has not caused any problems in the YS engines and is in fact our base Duration fuel when we don't mix our own.
The first after run oil I used was Prather oil (produced in the states) which was an after run oil the model boat guys used. Cost a fortune and when I got it analysed (by modeller chemist person) I found it that is was 95% Mil Spec 5056, hydraulic oil, just like we used in DC3s and 4s. Hence the switch and when I got lazy and bought an automatic gear box type car I noticed that the fluid was also predominatelt 5056 (this is way back in the 70's. So I put aside a stock of it and have been using ever since. Moral find an A&P guy and get him to acqwuire somefor you. It works well with all seals and gaskets we use and doesn't hurt any of the fuel lines. Re syringes, check out the local vet for varying sizes or medical suply shops all good places for modelling stuff.
The first after run oil I used was Prather oil (produced in the states) which was an after run oil the model boat guys used. Cost a fortune and when I got it analysed (by modeller chemist person) I found it that is was 95% Mil Spec 5056, hydraulic oil, just like we used in DC3s and 4s. Hence the switch and when I got lazy and bought an automatic gear box type car I noticed that the fluid was also predominatelt 5056 (this is way back in the 70's. So I put aside a stock of it and have been using ever since. Moral find an A&P guy and get him to acqwuire somefor you. It works well with all seals and gaskets we use and doesn't hurt any of the fuel lines. Re syringes, check out the local vet for varying sizes or medical suply shops all good places for modelling stuff.