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Air Leak

 
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Bill1200



Joined: 19 Oct 2008
Posts: 111
Location: medford oregon

PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 9:21 am    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

First experience with air leak. First noticed a couple of weeks ago it was bleeding down a little overnight. Called the old owner who thought it was most likely the snot valve lever being out of position, checked it and seemed ok. Then started noticing it would only charge up to about 3 during flight. Yesterday I filled it up at the port and sat in the plane with engine off, air valve closed and could hear a faint leak which sounded like it was coming from behind the pressure guage on the upper left side of the panel. Someone has recommended putting a few drops of oil in the system when doing a external fill, any suggestions on this?

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dsavarese0812(at)bellsout
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 9:38 am    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

Bill,
The snot valve can not cause the main air tank to leak down unless there is a bad check valve at the right hand side of the "cross" or manifold where the pressure relief valve is located at the top.

The problem you've described including where you hear the faint air leak could very well be the pressure relief valve on the firewall. If you pressurize the system from the external air fill port and the pressure will not go up to or hold at approx. 50 ATM's, the pressure relief valve piston seal or spring or both are probably bad.

Dennis

[quote] ---


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Bill1200



Joined: 19 Oct 2008
Posts: 111
Location: medford oregon

PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 10:39 am    Post subject: Re: Air Leak Reply with quote

Thanks Dennis, was talking to Cliff Coy this am, he suggested it might also me the gear selector based on the location of where I think I hear the leak. Will fill the system tomorrow, put the gear selector in neutral and see if it leak stops.
When I fill from external port I can raise the pressure until the relief valve opens, then the system will slowly bleed down over a couple of days


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petervs(at)knology.net
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 11:06 am    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

I agree with Dennis. This is almost always the pressure relief valve.
Sometimes dirt in the seat or just a worn seat. Very easy to replace. Seems
like it has to be replaced about once a year or so.

You can diagnose this by putting about 20 atm in the tank and then soaping
up the relief valve. There is a pair of small holes on the bottom of the
valve that will make bubbles if air is leaking by the seat.

The last air trouble I had was that sometimes the air pressure would be 20
atm while flying and other times about 45 atm while flying. I went through
everything until finally replacing the relief valve seal, which fixed the
problem.

Moral... Check the easy stuff first.

Pete


         __|__
__|__ ----=(*)=---- __|__
----=(*)=---- __|__ ----=(*)=----
----=(*)=----
--


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Bill1200



Joined: 19 Oct 2008
Posts: 111
Location: medford oregon

PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 11:48 am    Post subject: Re: Air Leak Reply with quote

Thanks

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mark.bitterlich(at)navy.m
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 1:11 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

In a YAK-50, if the leak is coming from the Landing Gear handle area,
this is an immediate alert that there is probably an internal leak in a
landing rear actuator cylinder. Venting air from the cylinders is
through the landing gear selector valve. Hence if one has an internal
leak you will hear air venting from the landing gear selector valve.
Again, in a 50, you can isolate this by putting the landing gear handle
in the middle position which isolates the landing gear system totally
from the rest of the aircraft. You can then pull lines on the cylinders
themselves to determine exactly where the leak is.

The 52 is much different than the 50 in this regard, with the dual
landing gear handles, etc.,etc. Dennis, I am sure you can explain the
difference here, because I certainly can not... But I believe that
besides the air relief valve, which Dennis just covered, your leak might
be in the landing gear system if the 52 is close to the 50 in how that
works, which I believe it is.

Mark Bitterlich
N50YK


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dsavarese0812(at)bellsout
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 4:44 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

You are correct Mark. Air leaking through the gear handle on a 52 with the handle in down position definitely points to the possibility of leaking landing gear actuator. Not too difficult to diagnose which one.
Dennis

[quote] ---


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Bill1200



Joined: 19 Oct 2008
Posts: 111
Location: medford oregon

PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 2:08 pm    Post subject: Re: Air Leak Reply with quote

So today I went to the hangar, pressure had bled down over day and a half to 20atm, filled up to 55atm when relief valve went off, could hear it bleed down to about 50atm. Went flying for approx 40min with steady decline in pressure to about 30atm, landed with about 20atm after gear,flaps,brakes. Wouldn't come back up past that level sitting at 70% for 2-3 minutes. Shut it down, filled it back up to 50 atm, sprayed soap/water on relief valve didn't see a leak, put gear lever at neutral,checked it 3 hours later looks fairly stable. Will check it again Friday to see if pressure holding with gear lever at neutral.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 3:20 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

Sounds like it definitely is a leaking gear actuator. If it still leaks with the gear handle in the down position, you'll need to isolate the problem to one of the actuators.

While the gear is down and with the gear handle in the DOWN position, remove the flex hose B-Nut (17 mm) on the end of the actuator closest to the chrome shaft that extends and retracts the gear. (The other end of the actuator at the top is the DOWN side of the actuator and has 2 flex lines connected to the shuttle valve). Now turn on the main air and if air is coming out of the fitting on the actuator (not the flex hose B-nut), the seals in that actuator are leaking. If you've found one bad actuator, you might as well bite the bullet and remove all of them plus the uplock (parrot hook) actuators and ship them off to Jill at M14P to be overhauled or buy the kits from Jill and overhaul them yourself.

Since your going to do all of the actuators, you might as well remove the flap actuator too. The condition of one actuator usually dictates the condition of all of the actuators.
Dennis


[quote] ---


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petervs(at)knology.net
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 3:21 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

Next time put the gear handle in the neutral position while you are flying.
You can try the flap handle too. If that solves the problem then you are
leaking past the seals in one of the cylinders.

If the air is leaking after you close the air valve, it is not the gear
system or flap system because the air valve isolates the tank from those
systems.

Good luck.

Pete


         __|__
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----=(*)=---- __|__ ----=(*)=----
----=(*)=----
--


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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 4:00 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

And, do this on jacks in case you phuck up.

   
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From: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of A. Dennis Savarese
Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2009 5:16 PM
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Re: Air Leak



Sounds like it definitely is a leaking gear actuator. If it still leaks with the gear handle in the down position, you'll need to isolate the problem to one of the actuators.



While the gear is down and with the gear handle in the DOWN position, remove the flex hose B-Nut (17 mm) on the end of the actuator closest to the chrome shaft that extends and retracts the gear. (The other end of the actuator at the top is the DOWN side of the actuator and has 2 flex lines connected to the shuttle valve). Now turn on the main air and if air is coming out of the fitting on the actuator (not the flex hose B-nut), the seals in that actuator are leaking. If you've found one bad actuator, you might as well bite the bullet and remove all of them plus the uplock (parrot hook) actuators and ship them off to Jill at M14P to be overhauled or buy the kits from Jill and overhaul them yourself.



Since your going to do all of the actuators, you might as well remove the flap actuator too. The condition of one actuator usually dictates the condition of all of the actuators.

Dennis




Quote:

----- Original Message -----

From: Bill1200 (billdykes52(at)gmail.com)

To: yak-list(at)matronics.com (yak-list(at)matronics.com)

Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2009 4:08 PM

Subject: Re: Air Leak



--> Yak-List message posted by: "Bill1200" <billdykes52(at)gmail.com (billdykes52(at)gmail.com)>

So today I went to the hangar, pressure had bled down over day and a half to 20atm, filled up to 55atm when relief valve went off, could hear it bleed down to about 50atm. Went flying for approx 40min with steady decline in pressure to about 30atm, landed with about 20atm after gear,flaps,brakes. Wouldn't come back up past that level sitting at 70% for 2-3 minutes. Shut it down, filled it back up to 50 atm, sprayed soap/water on relief valve didn't see a leak, put gear lever at neutral,checked it 3 hours later looks fairly stable. Will check it again Friday to see if pressure holding with gear lever at neutral.




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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 4:11 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

Great suggestion Pete.
Dennis

[quote] ---


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GreasySideUp



Joined: 24 Oct 2007
Posts: 44

PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 4:29 pm    Post subject: Re: Air Leak Reply with quote

petervs(at)knology.net wrote:
I agree with Dennis. This is almost always the pressure relief valve.
Sometimes dirt in the seat or just a worn seat. Very easy to replace. Seems
like it has to be replaced about once a year or so.

You can diagnose this by putting about 20 atm in the tank and then soaping
up the relief valve. There is a pair of small holes on the bottom of the
valve that will make bubbles if air is leaking by the seat.

The last air trouble I had was that sometimes the air pressure would be 20
atm while flying and other times about 45 atm while flying. I went through
everything until finally replacing the relief valve seal, which fixed the
problem.

Moral... Check the easy stuff first.

Pete


������ ��__|__
__|__ ----=(*)=---- __|__
----=(*)=---- __|__ ----=(*)=----
----=(*)=----
--


I think this is my problem. Over the winter it now bleeds down to about 15 when I fill externally. Where do I get those relief valve seals from? Should I replace the spring and any other internals as well?


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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 7:33 pm    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

Here is how I repair this...

Jill has the seals. I've made them myself out of a sheet of nitrile, but
they don't last as long as the one's Jill sells. Her's are out of a harder
rubber.

Basically you unwire, loosen the jam nut and unscrew the top of the relief
valve. Count how many turns it takes to remove it so you can get it at
approximately the same setting when you reassemble. Be careful to go slow at
the end if there is any pressure left in the system or you'll blow the valve
guts across the hanger. Some people like to actuate the flaps and brakes
until the air is gone, but I just unscrew the valve top slowly. Once you
have the parts in hand you can pry out the rubber disk in the bottom of the
brass actuator. If your pressure was ok when your engine was operating and
consistent, you probably don't need to replace anything but the rubber disk.
Clean everything until it is like new, dirt here causes problems. Especially
clean the seat in the bottom of the valve body. Spraying brake parts cleaner
on a q-tip and swabbing out the seat works good. Press the rubber disk in
the brass actuator. Some people like to glue it in place, but I don't and
have never had a problem. If you just press it in and you are somewhere and
it fails, you can take it apart and flip the rubber disk over and be back in
business. Coat everything with air tool oil and reassemble. Fill the system
with air watching the gauges carefully. If you get to 45 or 50 you need to
loosen the top of the relief valve until it is hissing good. Then add air
again until it pops. If you add air too slow it will only hiss, but it you
let the air in fast the valve your make a machine gun sound. Personally I
set my air so that it pops at 45 and bleeds down and stabilizes at 40. Many
guys run their air up at 55, but I think that higher pressure just wears out
the pump and parts faster. If your plane is easy to start, 40 is plenty. My
plane will start reliably down to 25 unless it is sooooper cold.

Good luck,

Pete

                                        __|__
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 05, 2009 12:29 am    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

I recently had the same symptoms on my CJ, it turned out to be a leaking air hose on the up side of the landing gear, was leaking thru the wall of the hose, hoses were getting along in life so replaced all hoises on the airplane.. No more leak.. Gary.. CJ .... N22YK


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 05, 2009 5:32 am    Post subject: Air Leak Reply with quote

I would recommend contacting Cliff Coy at Gesoco. Cliff usually has new pop-off valve pistons with the seals. Around $50 and well worth replacing with a new piston. Even the seals that Jill sells, which are good, do not last nearly as long as the new piston w/seal will.
Dennis
[quote] ---


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