cessna170bdriver wrote:... All I know is that ever since leaning on the ground was suggested to me, I've not had a single fouled plug or a single stuck valve...
Miles
Well that must be fairly recent and with scant operational data since only July this year you reported
" My experience has been that while using straight 100LL I've never had a stuck valve, stuck rings, or a fouled plug that couldn't be cleared with a full power runup." And as regards your engine failure and emergency landing due to a swallowed valve you wrote,
"The engine was still turning in the neighborhood of 2000 RPM, and was actually somewhat smoother than the couple of times when I’ve had stuck valves."
Now my friend, you're beginning to personalize this if by your statement "George would have you believe" you are insinuating that I'm deliberately misleading folks. I admit my analogy is an exaggeration, but only for the purpose of illustrating what the manufacturer states. (This is aside from my conditional agreement that idle can be crudely influenced by use of the mixture control.)
Anyone can look at the Precision website and see the multi-colored diagrams in which they show the fuel and air flows within this carburetor. As carburetors go, this one is pretty crude. (And it can also be seen by their diagrams that
my analogy of using a large valve to control the pressure issued by a smaller valve...is directly applicable to the main mixture valve in this carburetor being used to influence the fuel delivered by the much smaller needle-jet of the idle mixture screw downstream.)
A miniscule movement of the large valve can have a disproportionate effect on the smaller. Coupled with the induction system shortcomings, it becomes another case of "measuring with a micrometer, marking with a grease pencil, cutting with a hatchet" as far as individual cylinder mixtures go.
http://precisionairmotive.com/Publicati ... 20Rev1.pdf
While the mixture control is adequate for the purposes intended while operating on the main venturi, ...this is only because the air flow is so much greater when it's operating on the main jet, and even then,...no one I know of who rebuilds carbs will claim this carburetor's mixture control is anywhere near the standard that modern carburetor technology is capable of providing. It's a crude mixture control. (Not as bad as the old rotating air-hole-disc ones on the A65's, etc., but crude nonetheless.)
Miles, your own experience with your own carburetor may not be consistently repeatable on the fleet to offer your technique as a standard operation to the public with the assurance that
"you'll never "inadvertenly" maintain that setting into flight because as soon as you open the throttle for takeoff (or runup for that matter), you're going to be greeted with a deafening silence".
As the professional and perfectionist that I personally know you to be, you are well aware that generalizations without accurate, repeatable measuring/operating criteria cannot be offered carte blanche without risk. Advising everyone to get "a slight RPM rise, or lean to roughness and richen SLIGHTLY" hardly qualifies as accurate, scientifically acquired and repeatable data. I for one can do exactly that with my carburetor and then I can slowly advance the throttle and obtain takeoff power settings without my engine dying,contrary to your assurance to the public that situation absolutely will not happen. The different operating personalities of this model carb are notorious.
As a further point of discussion, even the rapid movement of the throttle may not kill an engine operated as you describe,...depending upon the performance of individual acceleration pumps. (As you are certainly well aware, there are three available settings for the travel/output of the acceleration pump generically, with variations amongst the thousands of carbs out there in world use.) I worry about it being prudent to categorically advise the world to utilize a technique which has been observed to be used successfully on your small sampling of the fleet, without also offering some safety caveats regarding a procedure which runs contrary to the mfr's recommendations.
It remains the fact that the idle adustment screw is the method by which the mfr intends the idle mixture to be controlled, and any burden of proof as to the safety of operation to the contrary is that of the commentator. IMHO
I've never bothered to lean this type carb/engine further at idle, and this includes over 3500 hours of operating them. The only stuck valve I've experienced that I recall was due to incorrect assembly.