Well this has been fantastic. General aviation is such a rewarding interest. Great info, great products, great explanation.
@loupitou06fl11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for posting this video. Can't wait to inspect our cylinders in our upcoming annual.
@michaelronneseth80111 ай бұрын
Another great presentation. Thank you
@bobremedi160711 ай бұрын
Great video Mike, Dave, and Joe. Standardizing the picture series sequence is more thoughtful way to maintain an awareness of engine health. I always felt the same as you all about compression tests. Well done.
@juliencooper1776 ай бұрын
That is a cool high-tech gadget I never had. I used a special flashlight with a light wand attached so to awkwardly peer down beside that and of course I always did the compression test when / as required. But if not retired now, I'd not give up the old compression tests for cylinders, I'd use both methods. And I'd put the flashlight and wand to their other small area uses where a simple visual look inwards and around is all that's needed, that was always handy when looking for dropped tools and hardware between engine parts. How technology can grow, it's amazing. 😊
@ronpearson191225 күн бұрын
Would love to see a video using the borescope through the oil fill line to see the cam lobes
@t03cutter9 ай бұрын
Sensational stuff Mike, love your work !
@chuck_in_socal11 ай бұрын
Nice job! Thanks.
@donnorris195411 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video and protocol. It will help me document our engines. Now a question - are the red and green colors still valid for engines that mostly run unleaded auto gas?
@scottbrooksby89878 ай бұрын
I just finished doing the borescope inspection on my Cessna 310R. While I understand the importance of checking all of these items to be thorough, I believe that if I had really good compressions, I would take a picture of the top of the valves in each cylinder, but would go no further. If I did find low compressions I would check more thoroughly, but I would not check every cylinder every time with all of these pictures. It takes me almost 2 hours to do the pictures on these two engines. It took longer until I got better at taking the pictures, but it still is not easy to look inside of each valve. Paying a mechanic for an extra 2 hours without bang for the buck does not make sense.
@kengle91167 ай бұрын
Respectfully, I'd reconsider your premise. A snapshot of a good compression reading doesn't tell you if you are on the verge of catastrophic failure.
@b100ka9 ай бұрын
is there another B-scope video showing the examination of the CAM thru the case after a cylinder has been removed?
@b.ellison3964 ай бұрын
Thank you Mike, Dave, and Joe! Your borescope initiative is commendable. Quick question though. I first bought the Vividia VA-400 in 2019 on your recommendation. I've not been able to capture the complete crown of a piston on a Lyc IO-360 even when the camera is completely pulled back to the spark plug hole with the piston at BTC. Am I doing something wrong?
@soaresviana10 ай бұрын
Wouldn't collecting material inside the cylinder be good for cylinder corrosion analysis?
@benjeboy40159 ай бұрын
I noticed that the image on Dave’s computer when he’s doing the bore scope inspection has a definite blue tinge to it, but the images shown afterwards as photos are a normal “real life” tinge. Why is this? All images I take with my Vividia borescope keep the blue tinge…
@nucciocaristia11 ай бұрын
Do you have ever borescoped a Rotax 912 cylinder? There is not to much room to move the probe. Any suggestion?
@bobremedi160711 ай бұрын
Prepping for the inspection is also important. Disconnect the aircraft battery, removing the spark plugs, and having new washers and torque wrench available for spark plug reinstall.
@robertfederhofer15939 ай бұрын
What photo app is Dave Pasquale using. It is not the one from Vividia scope for Windows OS
@andeboyer4 ай бұрын
I'm currently trying to find this out. I'm not pleased with the app from Vividia. Did you ever find a better solution?
@arjrmiller12 ай бұрын
@@andeboyerlooks like windows camera, what I use
@RichRavenMerolla5 ай бұрын
Mike is the guy. Subscribe to this.
@mrwonk11 күн бұрын
Good news is; if you get a big enough dataset along with human analysis, you can train an AI model to help make quick work of analyzing future armature images.
@gibcardwell379211 ай бұрын
Can bore scoop inspections be done instead of compression check on a Jabiru 6 cylinder engine? Does that meet FAA and Jabiru's annual inspection requirements?
@thomasaltrudaАй бұрын
Nope.
@210Kflyer8 ай бұрын
WARNING! The valve stem part of this inspection is dangerous. I just followed this video and my borescope is now ruined. Sticking the camera into the valve guide is a good way to get the borescope stuck in the valve. When that happens and you've perfectly opened the valve to max open, it doesn't come back out. I had a tough time getting the camera piece out of the cylinder without removing the jug, but thankfully was able to. I wouldn't recommend anyone worry about trying to see the valve guide. Not worth the $700 I just wasted or the extra maintenance trying to remove the FOD.
@tomsapp734 ай бұрын
He addressed this problem in this video a couple years ago. Sorry it happened to you, hope this video helps others prevent this problem. kzbin.info/www/bejne/aJ6tdqJ4baZrkK8
@barhammd2 ай бұрын
You must’ve moved the propeller while the scope lens was inside. If so, why’d you do that?
@210Kflyer2 ай бұрын
Negative
@TheEthanhicks922 ай бұрын
Except you didn’t follow this video because at no point did he say to nor did he demonstrate shoving the camera into the valve guide. The camera was outside of the valve and merely angled up to see the guide.
@210Kflyer2 ай бұрын
Did you actually watch what he did and listen?
@sssturges11 ай бұрын
Moving that prop around with that scope in the cylinder is not something I would do. Seems like unless your doing this on a regular basis with the experience doing it on a regular basis something bad could happen.
@Rwalt6111 ай бұрын
Remove all the plugs disables the engine. The worst thing that would happen is when the compression causes the prop to jump, but the engine will not start if you remove all the plugs and don't forget all the plugs in systems that have two or more plugs per cylinder. Also ground out the magneto.