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Fuel Sensor

 
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zsmith3rd(at)earthlink.ne
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PostPosted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 3:04 am    Post subject: Fuel Sensor Reply with quote

Optical/visual/mechanical/whatever.....my first impression is that I would USE the OUTBOARD fuel first.

The only good reason I can come up with at the moment is for structrual considerations.

Sure seems that the location of the mass of the fuel needs to be as near the wing root as possible; therefore
emptying the outboard tanks leaves those inboard full and closer to centerline of the aircraft.

Maybe some FE will inject a discourse on fuel management.
Remember.....in the old WWII movies they always dropped the tip tanks.

Regards to all fans of Scotch Brite Pads,

Zed/701/R912/90++%/etc/do not archive


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Float Flyr



Joined: 19 Jul 2006
Posts: 2704
Location: Campbellton, Newfoundland

PostPosted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 9:04 am    Post subject: Fuel Sensor Reply with quote

Good reasoning. Imagine a spin with the outboard tanks full and the inboard
tanks empty...Worse imagine a stall with one outboard tank full and
everything else close to empty.

Noel

[quote] --


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brothapig(at)HOTMAIL.COM
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 4:14 am    Post subject: Fuel Sensor Reply with quote

I may be wrong here, and it may not apply to small aircraft, but doesn't
fuel in the outboard part of the wings (i.e. tip tanks) actually decrease
stress on the wings in turbulence? This is from keeping weight out of the
fuselage (wings see less weight)

I don't know how this would affect spins, but wouldn't fuel in the outboard
wing at least keep the rotation slower?

-Ryan

----Original Message Follows----
From: Zed Smith <zsmith3rd(at)earthlink.net>
Reply-To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Fuel Sensor
Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2006 06:03:46 -0500 (GMT-05:00)



Optical/visual/mechanical/whatever.....my first impression is that I would
USE the OUTBOARD fuel first.

The only good reason I can come up with at the moment is for structrual
considerations.

Sure seems that the location of the mass of the fuel needs to be as near the
wing root as possible; therefore
emptying the outboard tanks leaves those inboard full and closer to
centerline of the aircraft.

Maybe some FE will inject a discourse on fuel management.
Remember.....in the old WWII movies they always dropped the tip tanks.

Regards to all fans of Scotch Brite Pads,

Zed/701/R912/90++%/etc/do not archive


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dredmoody(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 8:35 am    Post subject: Fuel Sensor Reply with quote

The farther out on the wing any weight (fuel, for instance) is located, the more energy it takes to make it move or change its motion. The important factor is moving mass farther from the center of mass and applies to moving weight farther forward or farther aft of the CG as well.

Therefore moving weight to a position farther out on the wing should make the plane more sluggish in the roll and yaw axes. Also, any established movement around the CG in those axes (such as a spin) will require more control force to stop and/or reverse it.

As someone else noted, it would be a great idea to burn that outboard fuel first or leave it on the ground for short flights.

Ed Moody II

---- Ryan Vechinski <brothapig(at)HOTMAIL.COM> wrote:
Quote:

I may be wrong here, and it may not apply to small aircraft, but doesn't
fuel in the outboard part of the wings (i.e. tip tanks) actually decrease
stress on the wings in turbulence? This is from keeping weight out of the
fuselage (wings see less weight)

I don't know how this would affect spins, but wouldn't fuel in the outboard
wing at least keep the rotation slower?

-Ryan


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larry(at)macsmachine.com
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 8:59 am    Post subject: Fuel Sensor Reply with quote

Ryan,
You're correct, in your assumption about tip tanks reducing stresses in
turbulence, but to a greater degree,
the full tip tanks would reduce rate of change for any maneuver. It
might prevent you from getting the correction
needed in a spin or even an awkward landing in the critical moments that
count.
There would be a period where you have to learn what reactions you have
when empty averse full. That could
be too long a time to avoid a seriously compromised event. I'd be
reluctant to put tip tanks on a small aircraft
for the same reasons. That's also why you see them on heavier aircraft
where tip tanks are a much smaller percentage
of total weight.

Larry McFarland - 601HDS at www.macsmachine.com
do not archive

Ryan Vechinski wrote:

Quote:

<brothapig(at)hotmail.com>

I may be wrong here, and it may not apply to small aircraft, but
doesn't fuel in the outboard part of the wings (i.e. tip tanks)
actually decrease stress on the wings in turbulence? This is from
keeping weight out of the fuselage (wings see less weight)

I don't know how this would affect spins, but wouldn't fuel in the
outboard wing at least keep the rotation slower?

-Ryan


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Float Flyr



Joined: 19 Jul 2006
Posts: 2704
Location: Campbellton, Newfoundland

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 7:16 pm    Post subject: Fuel Sensor Reply with quote

It probably won't affect the speed of the spin, after all the fuel is in the
tanks at the start of the spin, but the inertia of having that heavy fuel
that far from the CG could be interesting.

Weight any where in the wings is easier on the fuselage and wing attach
points than having fuel in the fuse itself. The wings after all have to
carry the fuse not the other way around.

Noel

[quote] --


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