Mike Busch on Engines Audiobook By Mike Busch cover art

Mike Busch on Engines

What every aircraft owner needs to know about the design, operation, condition monitoring, maintenance and troubleshooting of piston piston aircraft engines

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Mike Busch on Engines

By: Mike Busch
Narrated by: Justin Smallbridge, Michael Busch
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“The risk of engine failure is greatest when your engine is young, NOT when it’s old. You should worry more about pediatrics than geriatrics.” (Mike Busch, A&P/IA)

Mike Busch on Engines expands the iconoclastic philosophy of his groundbreaking first book Manifesto to the design, operation, condition monitoring, maintenance, and troubleshooting of piston aircraft engines.

Busch begins with the history and theory of four-stroke spark-ignition engines. He describes the construction of both the “top end” (cylinders) and “bottom end” (inside the case), and functioning of key systems (lubrication, ignition, carburetion, fuel injection, turbocharging). He reviews modern engine leaning technique (which your POH probably has all wrong), and provides a detailed blueprint for maximizing the life of your engine.

The second half presents a 21st-century approach to health assessment, maintenance, overhaul and troubleshooting. Busch explains how modern condition monitoring tools—like borescopy, oil analysis, and digital engine monitor data analysis—allow you to extend engine life and overhaul strictly on-condition rather at an arbitrary TBO. The section devoted to troubleshooting problems like rough running, high oil consumption, temperamental ignition, and turbocharging issues is worth its weight in gold.

If you want your engine to live long and prosper, you need this book.

©2018 Michael D. Busch (P)2023 Savvy Aviator, Inc.
Aviation Education Engineering Transportation
Comprehensive Information • Technical Depth • Valuable Knowledge • Money-saving Advice • Practical Wisdom

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Made me aware of things to keep track of regarding engine health, also companies to go to for assistance

Need for maintaining engine

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Sound practical advice based on decades of experience and pertinent data analysis.
All Mikes advice is backed up by his years of personal experience as an A&P, Owner, Pilot, CFI and business owner
Well written

Sound advice for important decisions

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Mike knocks IR out of the park as per usual. So great to see the tip of the hat to George Braly in the Epilogue. Honestly, I doubt I’d have finished the book without the Audible format. Congratulations!

Fabulous

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Book almost exclusively focuses on Lycoming and Continental engines and goes into great technical depth, component by component, on how to 1) evaluate an engine's condition (during annual or pre-buy) and keep it running for decades to come.

For me however the takeaway was to avoid such "legacy" engines and really find a way to afford an "experimental" but much, MUCH newer engine, which will work better, be much more efficient, AND more reliable. Will also be cheaper to maintain since it won't need so much archaic maintenance done every 100, 250hrs etc. Ly and Co engines do require it because they are build using 1950s tech and designs. Engine tech in general has progressed dramatically and it's very unfortunate that GA engines lag behind by half a century. My takeaway is that it's unwise to get involved with relying upon, and needing to maintain, such archaic tech, in 2025 and beyond.

Teaches how to keep ancient engines alive.

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Must read for all involved in GA maintenance, management, and ownership. Prospective pilots and CFIs should also read to develop comprehensive level of understanding and break years of dogmatic inaccuracies.

Fascinating and informative

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