I haven’t broke an engine in since the late 70’s . We would run them sloppy rich for many tanks before starting to lean them out .
I know these La engines get broke in totally different . I have the correct fuel in 5%n & 10%n with synthetic and castor oils at 11.5% each .
Can someone explained the proper break in procedures so I don’t ruin an engine !
It's far less demanding than before, and very difficult to damage it breaking it in "wrong". Not that I necessarily recommend this, but the last one, I took it out of the box, bolted it to the airplane exactly as it came, started it, and immediately cranked it up to 14,300 RPM, fast as it will go. I have also taken them out of the box, bolted it to the airplane, signalled for start, and then flown an official flight in a contest, first run is a scoring flight - a 500-point scoring flight.
My suggested procedure, less hubris-filled than above: Take it out of the box, bolt it to a test stand or airplane, put on the muffler, put about 4 ounces of fuel in the tank. Put on an APC 9-4 prop, sand the TE until it is just blunt enough to safely flip - it is *razor-sharp* as it comes. 5 seconds or so with 240 grit paper should be enough on each side.
Start the engine with the factory pre-set needle. That will start it at a medium-fast 4-cycle. Let it run that way for about 30 seconds, then lean it out until it is just barely into a 2-stroke all the time. Let it run out the tank, leave the needle alone. This won't take long, it really sucks up fuel when new. It will probably get richer during your 3-3.5 minute run, and the front end will get *boiling hot*, to the point if you touch the venturi, it will possibly burn you. Let it cool for a few minutes, fill tank, start it up again, and then set it to *just* 2-stroking again. That should require the needle to be closed a bit from the previous run, repeat, until it runs out of fuel. Let cool, do the same thing again, closing the needle to get it *just barely* into a 2-stroke, 4-5 times. Let cool, and your runs should be getting longer and longer, and the front end less and less hot. Thats the friction going away as the plain bearing breaks in.
After 4-5 runs, fill tank again, start again, lean engine until it just sags lean, then back off 3-4 clicks, until it gets richer enough to give a distinct drop, but still a fast 2-stroke. It should hold that setting, or get richer, if so, good to go. Note also that your fuel consumption will be much lower by now and the front end should not be getting as hot. If it is OK, and stays constant or richens slightly, go fly it. The fuel consumption will stabilize to teh point you can predict what the run time is, it will take around 3 ounces of fuel for a full stunt pattern.
The starting setting for every flight should be - start engine, lean until it sags, back off to peak, then 3-4 clicks of the needle richer. It will tend to richen up in flight for a while, but then be stable. If it is consistently too fast at that setting (likely), then you can back it off one click a flight, as long as you stay in a 2-stroke. If it is consistently too slow (not likely), then you can try a few clicks leaner, but never "over the top" lean - not because you will damage it, but because it will get even deader in the maneuvers.
If you have to richen it up all the way to a 4-stroke to get an acceptable speed, then add an air filter or panty hose layers over the venturi.
The tank should be mounted so that, from the top view, the outboard/right edge of the tank is no more than 1.5" from the centerline of the engine, or the base of the mounting lugs on a profile mount.
The intent is to run the engine in a medium 2-stroke in level flight and have it lean out slightly in the maneuvers. It is not intended to run in a 4-stroke or a 4-2 break with a 6" pitch prop. It will, but you will have a lot of problems if you try it and give up performance.
I wouldn't bother with the 5% fuel, us the 10%. 23% is way more oil than necessary and will eventually cause a varnishing issue, but it will take a while.
Cautions:
Do not take the head or backplate off for any reason. The backplate screws should be just snugged up, do not crank down on them or you will crack the corners of the backplate. If you need to, post back or PM me and explain the situation
Do not grind or drill anything, and don't let local experts tell you it needs to be ground on or drilled.
Do not run it with no muffler or "better/lighter muffler",
Do not modify the muffler
Do not replace the spraybar with a "better" spraybar or front-needle system
Do not listen to any flying buddies who might rush up to you while needling and richen it up because "your are going to BURN THAT UP!!!!"
The engine does not need to be modified in any way, for any reason, dead stock it probably has the best run characteristics of any engine you have ever had, and doesn't usually need any "tweaking" beyond what is above. If not, let us know.
Brett