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Calibrating fuel qty gauges
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Thruster87



Joined: 16 Apr 2008
Posts: 193
Location: Australia

PostPosted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 1:29 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

How do you calibrate fuel qty using a 10 - 75 ohm sender unit with a 0 -90 ohm fuel gauge? in other words what's the best why to get the gauges to read accurately near empty, which is more important then FULL. Thanks

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pwmac(at)sisna.com
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 5:55 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Buy a Cruz Pro gauge and calibrate is evey 1 gallon at the low end.
PW
===========
At 03:29 AM 8/10/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


How do you calibrate fuel qty using a 10 - 75 ohm sender unit with
a 0 -90 ohm fuel gauge? in other words what's the best why to get
the gauges to read accurately near empty, which is more important
then FULL. Thanks


Read this topic online here:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 56888#256888



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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 7:30 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

At 04:29 AM 8/10/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Thruster87" <alania(at)optusnet.com.au>

How do you calibrate fuel qty using a 10 - 75 ohm sender unit with a 0 -90 ohm fuel gauge? in other words what's the best why to get the gauges to read accurately near empty, which is more important then FULL. Thanks

The floats-on-a-swing-arm senders are
a legacy product from cars and other
vehicles that go back a very long way.

Making these things really accurate in more\
than one place is a bit fussy.

Years ago, we crafted an electronic signal
conditioning board for the Bonanzas and Barons
that allowed dead-on calibration of empty
and full. All other readings across the scale
simply fell where where the physics of the
sender dictates. The physics of these devices
are affected mildly by linearity of the wire
wound sensor resistor (usually within 5% of
true) but a whole lot by trigonometry of
the swing arm and tank geometry.

But as you've already recognized, the one
level you really want to be accurate is
the empty point. For this you can do some
things with series calibration resistors
and/or bending the float arm on the sender.
This CAN be a tedious, trial-by-error activity.

If it were my airplane, I'd probably craft
a microprocessor based signal conditioner
that would allow me to take readings at 5%
increments from empty to full and generate
a lookup table that converts as-installed
sender (transducer) readings into real
numbers. The BEST way to watch full levels
is with installation of a "dip stick" style
sensor at the low fuel warning level (generally
1/4 to 1/3 tank). Consider devices like this:

[img]cid:.0[/img]
One of these stuck through the tank wall at
the warning level will light a lamp on the
panel at the desired fuel quantity with
no risk for drift of calibration. See:

http://www.gemssensors.com/content.aspx?id 82

This is the no-brainer, dead-nuts accurate
low liquid lever sensing method I know of.
Capacity fuel gages with processor augmentation
are also easy to calibrate . . . but I think
I could get by with no active fuel gaging
other than a set of optical level detectors
cited above.


Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 8:37 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Bob,
These fuel sensors are a great idea. I wish I had seen them while building. I could have installed three of them in the wing root of each tank - one at "wing root full," one at "wing root half," and one at "wing root" empty (maybe two gal remaining). They would have been easy to calibrate and label on the panel. Then I would know exactly the fuel remaining at those levels.
The Princeton Capacitance Sensors I bought and connected to the AF-3400 EM do not work. I've calibrated them 7 times and they still fluctuate between full and 8 gallons when the tanks are full and fluctuate wildly when less than full. Perhaps I've done something wrong in the calibration - I know most errors are installation or operator errors - but, I tried to follow the AF-3400 instructions accurately.
Anyway, I may try to retro fit the Gem sensors.
Stan Sutterfield

Quote:
http://www.gemssensors.com/content.aspx?id=282

This is the no-brainer, dead-nuts accurate
low liquid lever sensing method I know of.




[quote][b]


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 1:08 pm    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

At 11:32 AM 8/12/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
Bob,
These fuel sensors are a great idea. I wish I had seen them while building. I could have installed three of them in the wing root of each tank - one at "wing root full," one at "wing root half," and one at "wing root" empty (maybe two gal remaining). They would have been easy to calibrate and label on the panel. Then I would know exactly the fuel remaining at those levels.
The Princeton Capacitance Sensors I bought and connected to the AF-3400 EM do not work. I've calibrated them 7 times and they still fluctuate between full and 8 gallons when the tanks are full and fluctuate wildly when less than full. Perhaps I've done something wrong in the calibration - I know most errors are installation or operator errors - but, I tried to follow the AF-3400 instructions accurately.
Anyway, I may try to retro fit the Gem sensors.

I'm sorry to hear that the capacity sensors are
not performing for you. I presume you've already
had discussions with the factory. These SHOULD be
pretty stable. There are design issues with respect
to variable dielectric constant of the fuel. But
this is a calibration error, not a dynamic level
sensing problem.

I've been fiddling with a processor based capacity
gaging amplifier for a TC application. Having a
micro-controller in the system opens a lot of interesting
doors including calibrating to the as-installed
sensor and tank combination and compensating for
temperature and dielectric constant as well.

Depending on what I learn with this program, I may
have a similarly agile capacity fuel gage amplifier
product to offer. However, even if our latest-n-greatest
gage makes it to production, it will still be augmented
with electro-optic, dip-sticks for absolute low-liquid
warning. I did the first such sensors to find their
way onto Beech products about 1980.

http://www.electromech.com/liquidlevel3RED.html

They've now been produced in dozens of configurations
and tens of thousands of fielded product. One of
my more prolific brainstorms.


Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------

[quote][b]


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pwmac(at)sisna.com
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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 2:17 pm    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

In my past life we used 3 fixed point ultrasonic sensors on the bottom of the rocket tanks. It took 3 to overcome the slosh issues.
IMO, fixed point sensors are not workable in a plane. An analog design is required. The best solution I have seen and I use is a simple boat turbine flow meter made by Northstar. The gauge reads gal/hour, gal remaining, and gal used. It has to be updated each time fuel is added. It is accurate after the initial fill. One still has to remember how many gallons is safe when the tank gets low. Many homebuilts use this product with success. No issues with slosh.

I am trying the CruzPro gauge for my truck which allows many cal points and the gauge reads the same stuff as the Northstar. This setup uses the stock resistance gauge and is still inaccurate due to slosh and tilt. However there is some damping in the float mechanism.

Paul
=================

[quote]At 11:32 AM 8/12/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
Bob,
These fuel sensors are a great idea. I wish I had seen them while building. I could have installed three of them in the wing root of each tank - one at "wing root full," one at "wing root half," and one at "wing root" empty (maybe two gal remaining). They would have been easy to calibrate and label on the panel. Then I would know exactly the fuel remaining at those levels.
The Princeton Capacitance Sensors I bought and connected to the AF-3400 EM do not work. I've calibrated them 7 times and they still fluctuate between full and 8 gallons when the tanks are full and fluctuate wildly when less than full. Perhaps I've done something wrong in the calibration - I know most errors are installation or operator errors - but, I tried to follow the AF-3400 instructions accurately.
Anyway, I may try to retro fit the Gem sensors.

I'm sorry to hear that the capacity sensors are
not performing for you. I presume you've already
had discussions with the factory. These SHOULD be
pretty stable. There are design issues with respect
to variable dielectric constant of the fuel. But
this is a calibration error, not a dynamic level
sensing problem.

I've been fiddling with a processor based capacity
gaging amplifier for a TC application. Having a
micro-controller in the system opens a lot of interesting
doors including calibrating to the as-installed
sensor and tank combination and compensating for
temperature and dielectric constant as well.

Depending on what I learn with this program, I may
have a similarly agile capacity fuel gage amplifier
product to offer. However, even if our latest-n-greatest
gage makes it to production, it will still be augmented
with electro-optic, dip-sticks for absolute low-liquid
warning. I did the first such sensors to find their
way onto Beech products about 1980.

http://www.electromech.com/liquidlevel3RED.html

They've now been produced in dozens of configurations
and tens of thousands of fielded product. One of
my more prolific brainstorms.

Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------[b]


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bbradburry(at)bellsouth.n
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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 2:33 pm    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

I have the Princeton capacitance sensors in my Lancair. I have not yet calbrated them, but I would be very shocked if the fuel slosh didn’t cause a lot of errors. The sensors are about 6 feet long and must be no more than 20 degrees off of horizontal. Fuel sloshing would move a great distance up and down the tubes. I have them in there because FAA says I need a fuel guage. I will check the level visually before each flight and refill when I should be at ¼ to ½ tank. Reguardless of what the fuel gage says!

Bill B



From: owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Robert L. Nuckolls, III
Sent: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 5:03 PM
To: aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: AeroElectric-List: Re: Calibrating fuel qty gauges
At 11:32 AM 8/12/2009, you wrote:


Bob,
These fuel sensors are a great idea. I wish I had seen them while building. I could have installed three of them in the wing root of each tank - one at "wing root full," one at "wing root half," and one at "wing root" empty (maybe two gal remaining). They would have been easy to calibrate and label on the panel. Then I would know exactly the fuel remaining at those levels.
The Princeton Capacitance Sensors I bought and connected to the AF-3400 EM do not work. I've calibrated them 7 times and they still fluctuate between full and 8 gallons when the tanks are full and fluctuate wildly when less than full. Perhaps I've done something wrong in the calibration - I know most errors are installation or operator errors - but, I tried to follow the AF-3400 instructions accurately.
Anyway, I may try to retro fit the Gem sensors.

I'm sorry to hear that the capacity sensors are
not performing for you. I presume you've already
had discussions with the factory. These SHOULD be
pretty stable. There are design issues with respect
to variable dielectric constant of the fuel. But
this is a calibration error, not a dynamic level
sensing problem.

I've been fiddling with a processor based capacity
gaging amplifier for a TC application. Having a
micro-controller in the system opens a lot of interesting
doors including calibrating to the as-installed
sensor and tank combination and compensating for
temperature and dielectric constant as well.

Depending on what I learn with this program, I may
have a similarly agile capacity fuel gage amplifier
product to offer. However, even if our latest-n-greatest
gage makes it to production, it will still be augmented
with electro-optic, dip-sticks for absolute low-liquid
warning. I did the first such sensors to find their
way onto Beech products about 1980.

http://www.electromech.com/liquidlevel3RED.html

They've now been produced in dozens of configurations
and tens of thousands of fielded product. One of
my more prolific brainstorms.



Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
(     )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------
Quote:
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0
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1
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3
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mprather(at)spro.net
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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 3:48 pm    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Seems like sloshing can be dealt with either/both mechanically or/and
electrically:

- A restriction or a baffle can be used to slow the flow of fuel into and
out of the tube(s). I'd be slightly surprised if the manufacturer didn't
include this.

- A low pass filter can be used to average and damp the display in
response to the raw input from the sensor. Again, I'd be slightly
surprised if the manufacturer didn't include this.
Regards,

Matt-

Quote:
I have the Princeton capacitance sensors in my Lancair. I have not yet
calbrated them, but I would be very shocked if the fuel slosh didn’t cause
a
lot of errors. The sensors are about 6 feet long and must be no more than
20 degrees off of horizontal. Fuel sloshing would move a great distance
up
and down the tubes. I have them in there because FAA says I need a fuel
guage. I will check the level visually before each flight and refill when
I
should be at ¼ to ½ tank. Reguardless of what the fuel gage says!

Bill B

_____

From: owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com
[mailto:owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Robert
L.
Nuckolls, III
Sent: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 5:03 PM
To: aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Re: Calibrating fuel qty gauges

At 11:32 AM 8/12/2009, you wrote:

Bob,
These fuel sensors are a great idea. I wish I had seen them while
building.
I could have installed three of them in the wing root of each tank - one
at
"wing root full," one at "wing root half," and one at "wing root" empty
(maybe two gal remaining). They would have been easy to calibrate and
label
on the panel. Then I would know exactly the fuel remaining at those
levels.
The Princeton Capacitance Sensors I bought and connected to the AF-3400 EM
do not work. I've calibrated them 7 times and they still fluctuate
between
full and 8 gallons when the tanks are full and fluctuate wildly when less
than full. Perhaps I've done something wrong in the calibration - I know
most errors are installation or operator errors - but, I tried to follow
the
AF-3400 instructions accurately.
Anyway, I may try to retro fit the Gem sensors.
I'm sorry to hear that the capacity sensors are
not performing for you. I presume you've already
had discussions with the factory. These SHOULD be
pretty stable. There are design issues with respect
to variable dielectric constant of the fuel. But
this is a calibration error, not a dynamic level
sensing problem.

I've been fiddling with a processor based capacity
gaging amplifier for a TC application. Having a
micro-controller in the system opens a lot of interesting
doors including calibrating to the as-installed
sensor and tank combination and compensating for
temperature and dielectric constant as well.

Depending on what I learn with this program, I may
have a similarly agile capacity fuel gage amplifier
product to offer. However, even if our latest-n-greatest
gage makes it to production, it will still be augmented
with electro-optic, dip-sticks for absolute low-liquid
warning. I did the first such sensors to find their
way onto Beech products about 1980.

http://www.electromech.com/liquidlevel3RED.html

They've now been produced in dozens of configurations
and tens of thousands of fielded product. One of
my more prolific brainstorms.


Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------



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echristley(at)nc.rr.com
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 6:16 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Matt Prather wrote:
Quote:


Seems like sloshing can be dealt with either/both mechanically or/and
electrically:

- A restriction or a baffle can be used to slow the flow of fuel into and
out of the tube(s). I'd be slightly surprised if the manufacturer didn't
include this.

- A low pass filter can be used to average and damp the display in
response to the raw input from the sensor. Again, I'd be slightly
surprised if the manufacturer didn't include this.



And the sensor should be located near the center of the tank putting it
in the middle of where the sloshing "see-saws".

--
Ernest Christley, President
Ernest(at)TechnicalTakedown.com

TechnicalTakedown, LLC
www.TechnicalTakedown.com
101 Steep Bank Dr.
Cary, NC 27518
(919) 741-9397


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 6:24 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Seems like sloshing can be dealt with either/both mechanically or/and
electrically:

- A restriction or a baffle can be used to slow the flow of fuel into and
out of the tube(s). I'd be slightly surprised if the manufacturer didn't
include this.

Me too. Over the years I've seen both mechanical and
electrical approaches to slosh management. Long sensors
can be mounted inside a tube that has a tiny hole at
each end to restrict rate of flow into and out of the
tube. The sensor he described may already have such
restrictions.

On the single engine Cessna's about '64 we looked at
"lubricating" the pivots on the fuel gages (automotive
moving magnets driven by rheostats with swing-arm-floats)
with 30,000 centistoke silicone oil. The smallest droplet
of this oil injected to the pivot bearing attenuated
sloshing response to a very low value.

- A low pass filter can be used to average and damp the display in
response to the raw input from the sensor. Again, I'd be slightly
surprised if the manufacturer didn't include this.

Yeah, the one I'm working with now filters the slosh
in software. The guys are playing with several filtering
philosophies. The most attractive is a simple running
average of 200 readings taken 10 times a second.

The B52 had capacity fuel gages in it when I was
working on them in '61. They were vacuum tube amplifier
driven servo motors that kept an LRC bridge balanced.
The servo motor also drove a potentiometer that produced
the output signal for the panel instrument. I recall
the instructor stating that the servo motor was
deliberately designed to be slow. Full scale response
time was on the order of 1 to 2 minutes. Exceedingly
unresponsive to slosh.

Anyone who has flown an old Cessna with the mechanical
swing-arm-float indicators in the wing roots or a J-3
with a wire on a cork will understand the seeds from
which more convenient and accurate fuel gaging systems
were grown. Seems the only time those gages were accurately
readable was on the ground.

The first moves for embarking upon a new
design for a fuel gaging system is to get the HISTORY.
An excellent source are patents. Freepatentsonline.com is
but one of several libraries of ideas good, bad, and
ugly that go back over 100 years. I've looked at
hundreds of such patents on liquid level measurement.
There are no excuses these days for not meeting design
goals that move the best-we-know-how-to-do forward. There's
also no excuse for any system designed in the past 40
years not to provide a level of functionality commensurate
with what they cost.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 6:55 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Quote:
IMO, fixed point sensors are not workable in a plane. An analog
design is required. The best solution I have seen and I use is a
simple boat turbine flow meter made by Northstar. The gauge reads
gal/hour, gal remaining, and gal used. It has to be updated each
time fuel is added.

This is an ambitious design goal . . . and technologically
feasible. I'll suggest that there are good reasons NOT to
have such accuracy displayed on the panel of an airplane.

Folks who learned about living comfortably in the world
of airplanes discovered pretty quickly that oldest pilots
were not so bold as to flight-plan with a dependency upon
their "fudge factors". I.e. fuel reserves. The reasons for
this are pretty clear. It's difficult to anticipate your
fuel needs with accuracy. Winds can affect speed over
the ground. Weather can affect routing changes. Conditions
at the destination airport can force delays or an alternate, etc.

The finely tuned fuel level indication system encourages
the pilot to exploit that knowledge. The pilot's willingness
to fly closer "to the edge" becomes increasingly comfortable.
The prudent pilot never launches into an extended operation
with less than KNOWN amounts of fuel aboard. Up to the tab,
slot-in-the-tab, or better yet . . . full. From time of take
of, the pilot with NO fuel gage is acutely aware of the fact
that so many hours from now, the engine stops. He's also
aware of the variables that affect accuracy of that
calculation. Hence, that thing called "reserve" fuel is
a both a PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL buffer for hitting the
"wall of variables" in flight planning.

Fitting an airplane with a fuel gage that accurately
depicts engine stopping to the minute is a psychological
trap that WILL eventually catch some pilot and his/her
passengers. I'm not suggesting that anyone, including
yourself, cannot prudently use accurate fuel quantity
measurement to good advantage . . . as long as you
continue to recognize that the value of that accuracy
becomes less useful as larger and less predictable
conditions pile onto your error budget.

Quote:
It is accurate after the initial fill. One still has to remember
how many gallons is safe when the tank gets low. Many homebuilts
use this product with success. No issues with slosh.

I am trying the CruzPro gauge for my truck which allows many cal
points and the gauge reads the same stuff as the Northstar. This
setup uses the stock resistance gauge and is still inaccurate due to
slosh and tilt. However there is some damping in the float mechanism.

All true. But never diminish the ideas that described
the WHOLE flight system and the environment in which
it operates. Even if you can absolu8tely depend on
the accuracy of a fuel quantity measurement system,
be alert and cognizant of both the values and risks
associated with KNOWING that number when there
are other more restrictive conditions that you
cannot know or predict with accuracy.

This is why our fuel gaging system will include both
a reasonably accurate level indication system combined
with "dip stick" accurate level warnings. The published
advise for using this system will suggest that no matter
how accurate the indication, no matter how well your
planning conforms to actual conditions, when that low
fuel warning light comes on you need to be 100% assured
of comfortable return to earth whether at your airport
of intended destination or not.

There are situations where the guy flying comfortably
with a wire on a cork is perhaps better off than the
guy who believes there is exploitable value in knowing
fuel quantity remaining down to the nearest cubic
centimeter. He may make more fuel stops but shucks, those
takeoffs and near greaser landings are so much fun.
You get to meet more friendly FBO line boys too.

Bob . . .


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thorps18(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 7:13 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Here's the low fuel sensor I'm using.

http://www.pillarpointelectronics.com/

On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 8:27 AM, Robert L. Nuckolls, III <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com (nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com)> wrote:
Quote:
At 04:29 AM 8/10/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Thruster87" <alania(at)optusnet.com.au (alania(at)optusnet.com.au)>

How do you calibrate fuel qty using  a 10 - 75 ohm sender unit with a 0 -90 ohm fuel gauge? in other words what's the best why to get the gauges to read accurately near empty,  which is more important then FULL. Thanks

    The floats-on-a-swing-arm senders are
    a legacy product from cars and other
    vehicles that go back a very long way.

    Making these things really accurate in more\
    than one place is a bit fussy.

    Years ago, we crafted an electronic signal
    conditioning board for the Bonanzas and Barons
    that allowed dead-on calibration of empty
    and full. All other readings across the scale
    simply fell where where the physics of the
    sender dictates. The physics of these devices
    are affected mildly by linearity of the wire
    wound sensor resistor (usually within 5% of
    true) but a whole lot by trigonometry of
    the swing arm and tank geometry.

    But as you've already recognized, the one
    level you really want to be accurate is
    the empty point. For this you can do some
    things with series calibration resistors
    and/or bending the float arm on the sender.
    This CAN be a tedious, trial-by-error activity.

    If it were my airplane, I'd probably craft
    a microprocessor based signal conditioner
    that would allow me to take readings at 5%
    increments from empty to full and generate
    a lookup table that converts as-installed
    sender (transducer) readings into real
    numbers. The BEST way to watch full levels
    is with installation of a "dip stick" style
    sensor at the low fuel warning level (generally
    1/4 to 1/3 tank). Consider devices like this:

[img]cid:.0[/img]
    One of these stuck through the tank wall at
    the warning level will light a lamp on the
    panel at the desired fuel quantity with
    no risk for drift of calibration. See:

http://www.gemssensors.com/content.aspx?id=282

    This is the no-brainer, dead-nuts accurate
    low liquid lever sensing method I know of.
    Capacity fuel gages with processor augmentation
    are also easy to calibrate . . . but I think
    I could get by with no active fuel gaging
    other than a set of optical level detectors
    cited above.


       Bob . . .

        ---------------------------------------
       ( . . .  a long habit of not thinking   )
       ( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
       ( appearance of being right . . .       )
       (                                       )
       (                  -Thomas Paine 1776-  )
        ---------------------------------------




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Joined: 16 May 2009
Posts: 80

PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 7:23 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

My EI FL-2CA fuel gauges come with the ability to select the "rate of update" which solves one of the problems, but isn't the REAL problem that one shouldn't be playing down in the "low fuel minefield" any way? Why worry about how to tell exactly when you're going to run out of fuel? I'd rather have really accurate gauges down to a quarter tank, and then who cares, it's time to fill up.

An accurate stick with marks on it, and confidence in fuel consumption rates, IMHO, are much more important than measuring fuel quantities near empty, unless you have no access at all to a physical measurement of fuel levels.

Ian Brown
Bromont, QC

On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 09:23 -0500, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:
Quote:

--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com (nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com)>

--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Matt Prather" <mprather(at)spro.net (mprather(at)spro.net)>

Seems like sloshing can be dealt with either/both mechanically or/and
electrically:

- A restriction or a baffle can be used to slow the flow of fuel into and
out of the tube(s). I'd be slightly surprised if the manufacturer didn't
include this.

Me too. Over the years I've seen both mechanical and
electrical approaches to slosh management. Long sensors
can be mounted inside a tube that has a tiny hole at
each end to restrict rate of flow into and out of the
tube. The sensor he described may already have such
restrictions.

On the single engine Cessna's about '64 we looked at
"lubricating" the pivots on the fuel gages (automotive
moving magnets driven by rheostats with swing-arm-floats)
with 30,000 centistoke silicone oil. The smallest droplet
of this oil injected to the pivot bearing attenuated
sloshing response to a very low value.

- A low pass filter can be used to average and damp the display in
response to the raw input from the sensor. Again, I'd be slightly
surprised if the manufacturer didn't include this.

Yeah, the one I'm working with now filters the slosh
in software. The guys are playing with several filtering
philosophies. The most attractive is a simple running
average of 200 readings taken 10 times a second.

The B52 had capacity fuel gages in it when I was
working on them in '61. They were vacuum tube amplifier
driven servo motors that kept an LRC bridge balanced.
The servo motor also drove a potentiometer that produced
the output signal for the panel instrument. I recall
the instructor stating that the servo motor was
deliberately designed to be slow. Full scale response
time was on the order of 1 to 2 minutes. Exceedingly
unresponsive to slosh.

Anyone who has flown an old Cessna with the mechanical
swing-arm-float indicators in the wing roots or a J-3
with a wire on a cork will understand the seeds from
which more convenient and accurate fuel gaging systems
were grown. Seems the only time those gages were accurately
readable was on the ground.

The first moves for embarking upon a new
design for a fuel gaging system is to get the HISTORY.
An excellent source are patents. Freepatentsonline.com is
but one of several libraries of ideas good, bad, and
ugly that go back over 100 years. I've looked at
hundreds of such patents on liquid level measurement.
There are no excuses these days for not meeting design
goals that move the best-we-know-how-to-do forward. There's
also no excuse for any system designed in the past 40
years not to provide a level of functionality commensurate
with what they cost.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 8:14 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:
Anyone who has flown an old Cessna with the mechanical
swing-arm-float indicators in the wing roots or a J-3
with a wire on a cork will understand the seeds from
which more convenient and accurate fuel gaging systems
were grown. Seems the only time those gages were accurately
readable was on the ground.

Maybe that is one more thing Heinlein should have added to his list of
things a man should know how to do: tell how much fuel is in a tank by
how wildly the indicator is bouncing.

First rule: If you are so worried about the fuel remaining that you
need to know within a tenth of a gallon, you need to be punching the
"nearest" button on your GPS...not stretching your glide to the destination.

Second rule: If the guage is bouncing all over the place, you either
have fuel or the guage is broken. One of the first things we learned in
my high-school chemistry class was how to interpret a bouncing arm on a
triple-beam scale. If it bounced equally to both side of the center
mark, then it was balanced. With the fuel level indicator, if it is
bouncing around the top, proceed. If it bounces around the bottom,
punch "nearest" of call the fuel truck before launching.

Third rule: The FAA minimums are minimums, not a GOAL.

--
Ernest Christley, President
Ernest(at)TechnicalTakedown.com

TechnicalTakedown, LLC
www.TechnicalTakedown.com
101 Steep Bank Dr.
Cary, NC 27518
(919) 741-9397


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 9:17 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Just out of curiosity, What ever happened to "Ernest is a Nerd?" He sure seemed like a very nice person?

Happy Skies,

Old Bob
Definitely Do Not Archive<G>

In a message dated 8/13/2009 11:15:33 A.M. Central Daylight Time, echristley(at)nc.rr.com writes:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: Ernest Christley <echristley(at)nc.rr.com>

Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:
Anyone who has flown an old Cessna with the mechanical
swing-arm-float indicators in the wing roots or a J-3
with a wire on a cork will understand the seeds from
which more convenient and accurate fuel gaging systems
were grown. Seems the only time those gages were accurately
readable was on the ground.

Maybe that is one more thing Heinlein should have added to his list of
things a man should know how to do: tell how much fuel is in a tank by
how wildly the indicator is bouncing.

First rule: If you are so worried about the fuel remaining that you
need to know within a tenth of a gallon, you need to be punching the
"nearest" button on your GPS...not stretching your glide to the destination.

Second rule: If the guage is bouncing all over the place, you either
have fuel or the guage is broken. One of the first things we learned in
my high-school chemistry class was how to interpret a bouncing arm on a
triple-beam scale. If it bounced equally to both side of the center
mark, then it was balanced. With the fuel level indicator, if it is
bouncing around the top, proceed. If it bounces around the bottom,
punch "nearest" of call the fuel truck before launching.

Third rule:  The FAA minimums are minimums, not a GOAL.

--
Ernest Christley, President
Ernest(at)TechnicalTakedown.com

TechnicalTakedown, LLC
www.TechnicalTakedown.com
101 Steep Bank Dr.
Cary, NC 27518
(919) ========================; = Use utilities Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp;   ===================================================



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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 9:50 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Good Afternoon 'Lectric Bob,

This may be just an exercise in semantics, but I do disagree with the philosophy I think you are espousing.

There is nothing wrong with planning on arriving at a safe landing spot with ten to fifteen minutes of fuel as long as you are confident you will be at that spot at the appointed time.

To say we should always have something beyond what is required is too broad for my liking. On those few occasions when I had the pleasure of flying a T-38, we landed every time with "Bingo" fuel. In that airplane, Bingo fuel was a bit less than twenty minutes worth. Good enough for one full power go around and not much more.

We pay a LOT of money for every pound of payload we put in our flying machines. I think it is very rational to reduce the amount of fuel down to what is required for the mission at hand. My cross country flyer has tip tanks and it can fairly easily fly twelve hours with full tanks. My planning for that airplane often has me arriving with less than one hours worth of fuel. If I was able to be as certain of landing field availability as I was when flying the T-38 and as confident as I was of the accuracy of the fuel gauges, I would not hesitate to fly my long ranger down to a Bingo fuel of twenty minutes.

Back when I was doing sling work with a helicopter, we added fuel for each trip lifting air conditioners to a roof top. Carrying no more than about five minutes of reserve fuel, we managed to get more air conditioners per day up on top of those roofs. The reserve fuel planned on should be based on the accuracy of the fuel indicating system and the reliability of the landing estimate

To do otherwise is as foolish as asking that every airplane be fitted with four engines just in case one of them happens to quit. We have decided that a good single engine provides adequate safety for many of us. The same thing goes for carrying extra fuel. Every ounce we carry that is not needed for the task at hand costs us money and $time$.

I prefer to know how much fuel is on board and how much I want when I land.

Just my thoughts

Happy Skies,

Old Bob
Stearman N3977A
Downers Grove, Illinois
LL22

In a message dated 8/13/2009 9:56:02 A.M. Central Daylight Time, nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com writes:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>
Quote:
IMO, fixed point sensors are not workable in a plane. An analog
design is required. The best solution I have seen and I use is a
simple boat turbine flow meter made by Northstar. The gauge reads
gal/hour, gal remaining, and gal used. It has to be updated each
time fuel is added.

This is an ambitious design goal . . . and technologically
  feasible. I'll suggest that there are good reasons NOT to
  have such accuracy displayed on the panel of an airplane.

Folks who learned about living comfortably in the world
of airplanes discovered pretty quickly that oldest pilots
  were not so bold as to flight-plan with a dependency upon
  their "fudge factors". I.e. fuel reserves. The reasons for
  this are pretty clear. It's difficult to anticipate your
  fuel needs with accuracy. Winds can affect speed over
the ground. Weather can affect routing changes. Conditions
  at the destination airport can force delays or an alternate, etc.

  The finely tuned fuel level indication system encourages
  the pilot to exploit that knowledge. The pilot's willingness
  to fly closer "to the edge" becomes increasingly comfortable.
The prudent pilot never launches into an extended operation
  with less than KNOWN amounts of fuel aboard. Up to the tab,
  slot-in-the-tab, or better yet . . . full. From time of take
  of, the pilot with NO fuel gage is acutely aware of the fact
  that so many hours from now, the engine stops. He's also
  aware of the variables that affect accuracy of that
  calculation. Hence, that thing called "reserve" fuel is
a both a PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL buffer for hitting the
  "wall of variables" in flight planning.

Fitting an airplane with a fuel gage that accurately
depicts engine stopping to the minute is a psychological
trap that WILL eventually catch some pilot and his/her
passengers. I'm not suggesting that anyone, including
yourself, cannot prudently use accurate fuel quantity
measurement to good advantage . . . as long as you
continue to recognize that the value of that accuracy
becomes less useful as larger and less predictable
conditions pile onto your error budget.

Quote:
It is accurate after the initial fill. One still has to remember
how many gallons is safe when the tank gets low. Many homebuilts
use this product with success. No issues with slosh.

I am trying the CruzPro gauge for my truck which allows many cal
points and the gauge reads the same stuff as the Northstar. This
setup uses the stock resistance gauge and is still inaccurate due to
slosh and tilt. However there is some damping in the float mechanism.

All true. But never diminish the ideas that described
the WHOLE flight system and the environment in which
it operates. Even if you can absolu8tely depend on
the accuracy of a fuel quantity measurement system,
be alert and cognizant of both the values and risks
associated with KNOWING that number when there
are other more restrictive conditions that you
cannot know or predict with accuracy.

This is why our fuel gaging system will include both
  a reasonably accurate level indication system combined
with "dip stick" accurate level warnings. The published
advise for using this system will suggest that no matter
how accurate the indication, no matter how well your
planning conforms to actual conditions, when that low
fuel warning light comes on you need to be 100% assured
of comfortable return to earth whether at your airport
of intended destination or not.

There are situations where the guy flying comfortably
with a wire on a cork is perhaps better off than the
guy who believes there is exploitable value in knowing
fuel quantity remaining down to the nearest cubic
centimeter. He may make more fuel stops but shucks, those
takeoffs and near greaser landings are so much fun.
You get to meet more friendly FBO line boys too.

Bob . . . ========================= Use utilities Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp;   ===================================================



[quote][b]


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 10:22 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 13:30 -0400, BobsV35B(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:
Good Afternoon 'Lectric Bob,

This may be just an exercise in semantics, but I do disagree with the
philosophy I think you are espousing.

There is nothing wrong with planning on arriving at a safe landing
spot with ten to fifteen minutes of fuel as long as you are confident
you will be at that spot at the appointed time.


What if something happens you didn't plan on -- such as an accident
blocking the runway 10 minutes before your arrival or unforecast thick
fog etc. Prudent planning includes adequate fuel to fly to an
alternate.
Quote:



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ianxbrown



Joined: 16 May 2009
Posts: 80

PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 11:04 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

It's a significantly more serious exercise than one of semantics. We're talking about life-saving behaviours like not PLANNING to run out of gas ten minutes from now, whilst still flying!!!!!!

Two days ago I returned to the circuit and "some idiot" decided to go ahead and encroach the runway without a radio call, despite my repeated calls on downwind, base, final, and "overshooting". He apologized that his radio reception wasn't very good, but then apparently neither was his eyesight. He then exited our right hand circuit UNDER me, at five hundred feet, while I was still in the overshoot. My circuit took more than ten minutes, and I had PLENTY fuel for the go-around.

Old Ian (and planning to get older).

On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 13:30 -0400, BobsV35B(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:
Good Afternoon 'Lectric Bob, This may be just an exercise in semantics, but I do disagree with the philosophy I think you are espousing. There is nothing wrong with planning on arriving at a safe landing spot with ten to fifteen minutes of fuel as long as you are confident you will be at that spot at the appointed time. To say we should always have something beyond what is required is too broad for my liking. On those few occasions when I had the pleasure of flying a T-38, we landed every time with "Bingo" fuel. In that airplane, Bingo fuel was a bit less than twenty minutes worth. Good enough for one full power go around and not much more. We pay a LOT of money for every pound of payload we put in our flying machines. I think it is very rational to reduce the amount of fuel down to what is required for the mission at hand. My cross country flyer has tip tanks and it can fairly easily fly twelve hours with full tanks. My planning for that airplane often has me arriving with less than one hours worth of fuel. If I was able to be as certain of landing field availability as I was when flying the T-38 and as confident as I was of the accuracy of the fuel gauges, I would not hesitate to fly my long ranger down to a Bingo fuel of twenty minutes. Back when I was doing sling work with a helicopter, we added fuel for each trip lifting air conditioners to a roof top. Carrying no more than about five minutes of reserve fuel, we managed to get more air conditioners per day up on top of those roofs. The reserve fuel planned on should be based on the accuracy of the fuel indicating system and the reliability of the landing estimate To do otherwise is as foolish as asking that every airplane be fitted with four engines just in case one of them happens to quit. We have decided that a good single engine provides adequate safety for many of us. The same thing goes for carrying extra fuel. Every ounce we carry that is not needed for the task at hand costs us money and $time$. I prefer to know how much fuel is on board and how much I want when I land. Just my thoughts Happy Skies, Old Bob Stearman N3977A Downers Grove, Illinois LL22 In a message dated 8/13/2009 9:56:02 A.M. Central Daylight Time, nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com writes:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>


> IMO, fixed point sensors are not workable in a plane. An analog
> design is required. The best solution I have seen and I use is a
> simple boat turbine flow meter made by Northstar. The gauge reads
> gal/hour, gal remaining, and gal used. It has to be updated each
> time fuel is added.

This is an ambitious design goal . . . and technologically
feasible. I'll suggest that there are good reasons NOT to
have such accuracy displayed on the panel of an airplane.

Folks who learned about living comfortably in the world
of airplanes discovered pretty quickly that oldest pilots
were not so bold as to flight-plan with a dependency upon
their "fudge factors". I.e. fuel reserves. The reasons for
this are pretty clear. It's difficult to anticipate your
fuel needs with accuracy. Winds can affect speed over
the ground. Weather can affect routing changes. Conditions
at the destination airport can force delays or an alternate, etc.

The finely tuned fuel level indication system encourages
the pilot to exploit that knowledge. The pilot's willingness
to fly closer "to the edge" becomes increasingly comfortable.
The prudent pilot never launches into an extended operation
with less than KNOWN amounts of fuel aboard. Up to the tab,
slot-in-the-tab, or better yet . . . full. From time of take
of, the pilot with NO fuel gage is acutely aware of the fact
that so many hours from now, the engine stops. He's also
aware of the variables that affect accuracy of that
calculation. Hence, that thing called "reserve" fuel is
a both a PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL buffer for hitting the
"wall of variables" in flight planning.

Fitting an airplane with a fuel gage that accurately
depicts engine stopping to the minute is a psychological
trap that WILL eventually catch some pilot and his/her
passengers. I'm not suggesting that anyone, including
yourself, cannot prudently use accurate fuel quantity
measurement to good advantage . . . as long as you
continue to recognize that the value of that accuracy
becomes less useful as larger and less predictable
conditions pile onto your error budget.

> It is accurate after the initial fill. One still has to remember
> how many gallons is safe when the tank gets low. Many homebuilts
> use this product with success. No issues with slosh.
>
>I am trying the CruzPro gauge for my truck which allows many cal
>points and the gauge reads the same stuff as the Northstar. This
>setup uses the stock resistance gauge and is still inaccurate due to
>slosh and tilt. However there is some damping in the float mechanism.

All true. But never diminish the ideas that described
the WHOLE flight system and the environment in which
it operates. Even if you can absolu8tely depend on
the accuracy of a fuel quantity measurement system,
be alert and cognizant of both the values and risks
associated with KNOWING that number when there
are other more restrictive conditions that you
cannot know or predict with accuracy.

This is why our fuel gaging system will include both
a reasonably accurate level indication system combined
with "dip stick" accurate level warnings. The published
advise for using this system will suggest that no matter
how accurate the indication, no matter how well your
planning conforms to actual conditions, when that low
fuel warning light comes on you need to be 100% assured
of comfortable return to earth whether at your airport
of intended destination or not.

There are situations where the guy flying comfortably
with a wire on a cork is perhaps better off than the
guy who believes there is exploitable value in knowing
fuel quantity remaining down to the nearest cubic
centimeter. He may make more fuel stops but shucks, those
takeoffs and near greaser landings are so much fun.
You get to meet more friendly FBO line boys too.

Bob . . . ========================= Use utilities Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp; ===================================================




Quote:




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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 11:22 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Good Afternoon Dan,

The availability of alternate landing space is absolutely part of the computations needed.

When we were flying the T-38, we had the salt runways of Muroc available. When we were lifting air conditioners, there were alternate spots in the parking lot in which we could land. Worst case, we could stay on the roof and carry a gas of can up to the helicopter.

Evaluating the reliability of the landing site is as big a part of fuel planning as is any other factor. Once again. proper planning is key.

There are times when I want four hours worth of fuel when I am on final approach.

I do NOT like to make wild guesses as to what will be needed. I plan for what is likely to happen. Both expected and variable conditions must be considered.

As Always, It All Depends!

Happy Skies

Old Bob
AKA
Bob Siegfried
628 west 86th Street
Downers Grove, Illinois
LL22
Stearman N3977A

In a message dated 8/13/2009 1:23:19 P.M. Central Daylight Time, DanFM01(at)butter.toast.net writes:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: Dan Morrow <DanFM01(at)butter.toast.net>

On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 13:30 -0400, BobsV35B(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:
Good Afternoon 'Lectric Bob,
 
This may be just an exercise in semantics, but I do disagree with the
philosophy I think you are espousing.

There is nothing wrong with planning on arriving at a safe landing
spot with ten to fifteen minutes of fuel as long as you are confident
you will be at that spot at the appointed time.


What if something happens you didn't plan on -- such as an accident
blocking the runway 10 minutes before your arrival or unforecast thick
fog etc.  Prudent planning includes adequate fuel to fly to an
alternate.
Quote:
========================= Use utilities Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp;   ===================================================



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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 11:39 am    Post subject: Calibrating fuel qty gauges Reply with quote

Good Afternoon Old Ian,

If you are saying you disagree with my philosophy, that is just fine.

I rarely plan to arrive with only ten minutes of reserve fuel, but there are conditions where I would be happy to do so. The T-38 flights at Edwards were just such flights.

My personal planning at the average multi runway airport is forty-five minutes. If there is only one runway, I want a close by alternate and fuel to get there

It All Depends!

That is more than what the FAA requires, but it is what I like to have. However, I do NOT wish to arrive anywhere without knowing accurately how much fuel I do have on board. If I know that amount due to careful timing or by the trust I have in my fuel gauges, I still want to know the amount, not just that there is an indeterminate large amount of fuel on board.

You speak quite sarcastically about an airplane that was arriving at "your" destination and who was not listening to your pronouncements on the radio.

We all must remember that it is still legal for aircraft that have no radio to be using most airspace in this nation. You may not think that is proper, but if you are flying in pilot controlled airspace, you should always be aware that it is quite likely that a NORDO aircraft may be sharing "your" airspace.

The most likely cause of a NORDO conflict is when you or the pilot of the other aircraft have made the error of not tuning the correct frequency, flipping the right audio switch, pressing the wrong mike button or other similar pilot failures of omission or commission. I know I have made all of those errors at one time or another. While I try very hard to reduce my errors, I know that I am human and all of us humans do make mistakes. Not only that, but radios DO fail.

That is what planning is all about. We plan what we need and how to handle what we don't expect. Such planning requires careful analysis of the conditions that prevail and that includes a good idea as to how much fuel we have at any particular moment. I do not wish to carry somewhere between three to five hours of fuel when I have no idea which amount of fuel is actually in my flying machine.

Whether I plan on landing with ten minutes fuel or four hours fuel, I want to know how much there is and where it is located.

Happy Skies,

Old Bob
Didn't get that way by making Wild Guesses!

In a message dated 8/13/2009 2:05:48 P.M. Central Daylight Time, ixb(at)videotron.ca writes:
Quote:
It's a significantly more serious exercise than one of semantics. We're talking about life-saving behaviours like not PLANNING to run out of gas ten minutes from now, whilst still flying!!!!!!

Two days ago I returned to the circuit and "some idiot" decided to go ahead and encroach the runway without a radio call, despite my repeated calls on downwind, base, final, and "overshooting". He apologized that his radio reception wasn't very good, but then apparently neither was his eyesight. He then exited our right hand circuit UNDER me, at five hundred feet, while I was still in the overshoot. My circuit took more than ten minutes, and I had PLENTY fuel for the go-around.

Old Ian (and planning to get older).

On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 13:30 -0400, BobsV35B(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:
Good Afternoon 'Lectric Bob, This may be just an exercise in semantics, but I do disagree with the philosophy I think you are espousing. There is nothing wrong with planning on arriving at a safe landing spot with ten to fifteen minutes of fuel as long as you are confident you will be at that spot at the appointed time. To say we should always have something beyond what is required is too broad for my liking. On those few occasions when I had the pleasure of flying a T-38, we landed every time with "Bingo" fuel. In that airplane, Bingo fuel was a bit less than twenty minutes worth. Good enough for one full power go around and not much more. We pay a LOT of money for every pound of payload we put in our flying machines. I think it is very rational to reduce the amount of fuel down to what is required for the mission at hand. My cross country flyer has tip tanks and it can fairly easily fly twelve hours with full tanks. My planning for that airplane often has me arriving with less than one hours worth of fuel. If I was able to be as certain of landing field availability as I was when flying the T-38 and as confident as I was of the accuracy of the fuel gauges, I would not hesitate to fly my long ranger down to a Bingo fuel of twenty minutes. Back when I was doing sling work with a helicopter, we added fuel for each trip lifting air conditioners to a roof top. Carrying no more than about five minutes of reserve fuel, we managed to get more air conditioners per day up on top of those roofs. The reserve fuel planned on should be based on the accuracy of the fuel indicating system and the reliability of the landing estimate To do otherwise is as foolish as asking that every airplane be fitted with four engines just in case one of them happens to quit. We have decided that a good single engine provides adequate safety for many of us. The same thing goes for carrying extra fuel. Every ounce we carry that is not needed for the task at hand costs us money and $time$. I prefer to know how much fuel is on board and how much I want when I land. Just my thoughts Happy Skies, Old Bob Stearman N3977A Downers Grove, Illinois LL22 In a message dated 8/13/2009 9:56:02 A.M. Central Daylight Time, nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com writes:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>
Quote:
IMO, fixed point sensors are not workable in a plane. An analog
design is required. The best solution I have seen and I use is a
simple boat turbine flow meter made by Northstar. The gauge reads
gal/hour, gal remaining, and gal used. It has to be updated each
time fuel is added.

  This is an ambitious design goal . . . and technologically
feasible. I'll suggest that there are good reasons NOT to
  have such accuracy displayed on the panel of an airplane.

Folks who learned about living comfortably in the world
of airplanes discovered pretty quickly that oldest pilots
were not so bold as to flight-plan with a dependency upon
  their "fudge factors". I.e. fuel reserves. The reasons for
  this are pretty clear. It's difficult to anticipate your
fuel needs with accuracy. Winds can affect speed over
the ground. Weather can affect routing changes. Conditions
at the destination airport can force delays or an alternate, etc.

The finely tuned fuel level indication system encourages
  the pilot to exploit that knowledge. The pilot's willingness
  to fly closer "to the edge" becomes increasingly comfortable.
  The prudent pilot never launches into an extended operation
  with less than KNOWN amounts of fuel aboard. Up to the tab,
  slot-in-the-tab, or better yet . . . full. From time of take
  of, the pilot with NO fuel gage is acutely aware of the fact
  that so many hours from now, the engine stops. He's also
aware of the variables that affect accuracy of that
calculation. Hence, that thing called "reserve" fuel is
a both a PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL buffer for hitting the
  "wall of variables" in flight planning.

Fitting an airplane with a fuel gage that accurately
  depicts engine stopping to the minute is a psychological
trap that WILL eventually catch some pilot and his/her
passengers. I'm not suggesting that anyone, including
  yourself, cannot prudently use accurate fuel quantity
  measurement to good advantage . . . as long as you
continue to recognize that the value of that accuracy
becomes less useful as larger and less predictable
  conditions pile onto your error budget.

Quote:
It is accurate after the initial fill. One still has to remember
how many gallons is safe when the tank gets low. Many homebuilts
use this product with success. No issues with slosh.

I am trying the CruzPro gauge for my truck which allows many cal
points and the gauge reads the same stuff as the Northstar. This
setup uses the stock resistance gauge and is still inaccurate due to
slosh and tilt. However there is some damping in the float mechanism.

All true. But never diminish the ideas that described
  the WHOLE flight system and the environment in which
it operates. Even if you can absolu8tely depend on
the accuracy of a fuel quantity measurement system,
be alert and cognizant of both the values and risks
associated with KNOWING that number when there
are other more restrictive conditions that you
cannot know or predict with accuracy.

This is why our fuel gaging system will include both
  a reasonably accurate level indication system combined
  with "dip stick" accurate level warnings. The published
  advise for using this system will suggest that no matter
how accurate the indication, no matter how well your
planning conforms to actual conditions, when that low
fuel warning light comes on you need to be 100% assured
  of comfortable return to earth whether at your airport
of intended destination or not.

There are situations where the guy flying comfortably
  with a wire on a cork is perhaps better off than the
  guy who believes there is exploitable value in knowing
fuel quantity remaining down to the nearest cubic
centimeter. He may make more fuel stops but shucks, those
takeoffs and near greaser landings are so much fun.
You get to meet more friendly FBO line boys too.

Bob . . . ========================= Use utilities Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp; ===================================================


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