EGT temps really aren't important unless you are worrying about melting down your exhaust pipes. They vary depending on altitude, mixture, RPM, and engine. The actual number isn't important, but is typically used only to measure the current EGT reading vs Peak EGT reading. That's why the old Alcore EGT guages didn'thave any numbers. Only gradicule markings so you could make a comparison as you leaned the for peak EGT, then either rich or lean of peak depending on the the desired operation. A multipoint EGT set up allows the pilot to compare cylinder to cylinder readings, but again, the actual number isn't what is critical.
Jeff Scott Los Alamos, NM On Mon, 24 Aug 2009 22:19:49 -0500 "Mark Langford" <n5...@hiwaay.net> writes: > Dan Heath wrote: > > > Raising the RPM has a direct affect on the EGT, so I am being > > cautious about that, as 1275 is a bit high even though the other > temps are good. Mark Langford wrote: > > I wouldn't lose any sleep over those EGT temps. In fact, I'd pull > the > mixture knob a bit and quit burning so much fuel, personally! ----snip----- > > Mark Langford ____________________________________________________________ Best Weight Loss Program - Click Here! http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2141/fc/BLSrjpTFoYbEEn0PCX3pnUa6adgVvfUCupPGt4olwlB0VZAZ2ObPwJmlcUg/