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Fuel Pressure Fixed

 
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Steve Glasgow



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 674

PostPosted: Sat Jan 27, 2007 2:13 pm    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Turns out there was apparently air in the line to the sender. Probably from
lines being open on annual.

I flew before doing the procedure below and the fuel pressure was all over
the place. From 4 to 9.5 psi.

Anyway here is what to do to get the air out. Disconnect wires from fuel
sender. Loosen sender so it can be moved by hand. Keep sender hand tight
and turn on electric pump. Now loosen sender till fuel comes out around the
pipe fitting. Then tighten to stop the fuel from leaking. Turn off
electric pump, secure sender and hook up wires. Done. From now on I will
do this procedure whenever a fuel line is opened.

I flew before doing this and the fuel pressure was all over the place. From
4 to 9.5 psi.

Cappy


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PostPosted: Sat Jan 27, 2007 7:30 pm    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Interesting, Cappy. I've never had to do this with either my oil or
fuel pressure transducers. I figured fluid is fluid, whether oil,
gasoline or air; all should transfer the pressure to the sensor just
fine. No problems thus far. It's not like it could cavitate or
anything.

Makes one wonder... anyhow, glad it's fixed. I might get to fly
tomorrow if the runway isn;t too mushy; the winds today were gusty on
the ground and 50 kts at 6000 AGL. Turbulence in these-here
mountains!

-Stormy

On 1/27/07, Steve Glasgow <willfly(at)carolina.rr.com> wrote:
Quote:


Turns out there was apparently air in the line to the sender. Probably from
lines being open on annual.

I flew before doing the procedure below and the fuel pressure was all over
the place. From 4 to 9.5 psi.

Anyway here is what to do to get the air out. Disconnect wires from fuel
sender. Loosen sender so it can be moved by hand. Keep sender hand tight
and turn on electric pump. Now loosen sender till fuel comes out around the
pipe fitting. Then tighten to stop the fuel from leaking. Turn off
electric pump, secure sender and hook up wires. Done. From now on I will
do this procedure whenever a fuel line is opened.

I flew before doing this and the fuel pressure was all over the place. From
4 to 9.5 psi.

Cappy


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flyguy



Joined: 04 Mar 2006
Posts: 325

PostPosted: Sat Jan 27, 2007 7:46 pm    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

looks like 20-30k in Ashe co. and snow
flurries...better keep it on the gnd. Stormer...RR
--- Bill Boyd <sportav8r(at)gmail.com> wrote:

Quote:

<sportav8r(at)gmail.com>

Interesting, Cappy. I've never had to do this with
either my oil or
fuel pressure transducers. I figured fluid is
fluid, whether oil,
gasoline or air; all should transfer the pressure to
the sensor just
fine. No problems thus far. It's not like it could
cavitate or
anything.

Makes one wonder... anyhow, glad it's fixed. I
might get to fly
tomorrow if the runway isn;t too mushy; the winds
today were gusty on
the ground and 50 kts at 6000 AGL. Turbulence in
these-here
mountains!

-Stormy

On 1/27/07, Steve Glasgow <willfly(at)carolina.rr.com>
wrote:
>
Glasgow" <willfly(at)carolina.rr.com>
>
> Turns out there was apparently air in the line to
the sender. Probably from
> lines being open on annual.
>
> I flew before doing the procedure below and the
fuel pressure was all over
> the place. From 4 to 9.5 psi.
>
> Anyway here is what to do to get the air out.
Disconnect wires from fuel
> sender. Loosen sender so it can be moved by hand.
Keep sender hand tight
> and turn on electric pump. Now loosen sender till
fuel comes out around the
> pipe fitting. Then tighten to stop the fuel from
leaking. Turn off
> electric pump, secure sender and hook up wires.
Done. From now on I will
> do this procedure whenever a fuel line is opened.
>
> I flew before doing this and the fuel pressure was
all over the place. From
> 4 to 9.5 psi.
>
> Cappy
>
>
>
>
>
>


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Larry Bowen



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 802
Location: NC, USA

PostPosted: Sat Jan 27, 2007 8:43 pm    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Glad to hear you are back in the air.

I filled up today at RUQ for the first time since leaving BKV in FL last
Sunday. Only 26 gallons to fill up. That's almost 19 mpg. Better than the
Tundra. Amazing to me.

I went to MTV for a late lunch afterwards. There was a couple RV's there
getting ready to go as I can in. From EXX, ROA, and GSO (?). They're
everywhere. Smile

Keep building,

-
Larry Bowen, RV-8 & 7 emp.
Larry(at)BowenAero.com
http://BowenAero.com


[quote] --


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Ron Schreck



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 94
Location: Gold Hill, NC

PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 4:20 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Steve,

Glad to hear you are back in the air. Actually, your problem and
solution makes perfect sense to me (Monday morning quarterbacking,
however). If your fuel and oil pressure sensors are mounted high on the
firewall, it only makes sense that any air trapped in the lines will
never bleed out (down hill) without some help. True, the trapped air
may transfer some measure of pressure, but being much more compressible
than a liquid it would certainly be a false reading. I think your
solution merits a mention on the RV list and perhaps a suggestion that
these sensors be mounted low on the firewall to avoid the problem
altogether. Nice work, Cappy!

Smokey

--


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Steve Glasgow



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 674

PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 4:29 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Thanks for the Kudos Smokey! As you know I have been dealing with Low or High fuel pressure since the beginning so I'm whiting till the jury is in. I have ordered a direct reading pressure gauge that should be here Wednesday. Then I can find out what the "real fuel pressure" is.

Cappy
[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 5:06 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Smokey,

I think the trapped air compresses until it reaches equilib. and then
transmits all the pressure on down the line... in doing so it will
tend to dampen any pulses (soften the water-hammer effect,
what-have-you) but I think all the pressure will show up at the
transducer. Enlighten me if I'm overlooking the obvious.

It sounds like Cappy might have fixed his gauge but broken some law of
physics. Typical Cappy maneuver if you ask me. Today I shall have to
see if he messed up Bernouli and Newton's, by seeing if my wing still
generates enough lift to fly Smile

Cappy, I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't break or damage physical laws
that the rest of us use every day, just to get your gauges reading
correctly; that's very selfish and won't be tolerated.

-Stormy

On 1/28/07, Ron Schreck <ronschreck(at)alltel.net> wrote:
[quote]

Steve,

Glad to hear you are back in the air. Actually, your problem and
solution makes perfect sense to me (Monday morning quarterbacking,
however). If your fuel and oil pressure sensors are mounted high on the
firewall, it only makes sense that any air trapped in the lines will
never bleed out (down hill) without some help. True, the trapped air
may transfer some measure of pressure, but being much more compressible
than a liquid it would certainly be a false reading. I think your
solution merits a mention on the RV list and perhaps a suggestion that
these sensors be mounted low on the firewall to avoid the problem
altogether. Nice work, Cappy!

Smokey

--


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Steve Glasgow



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 674

PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 5:28 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

What about compressibility of a gas verses a liquid. Water pipes have air trapped in them all the time to prevent hammer effect. The pressure sender is up the line not down the line. Pressure is correct at the engine, just not the pressure sender which is way above the carburetor. You may be correct if the sender is plumbed at the carburetor but mine isn't. All I know is it worked. No more oscillating fuel pressure.

Stormy, are you giving us bad coordinates again?

Love Cappy
[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 5:44 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Yeah, I've been known to lose my position fix on the internet before...

I'm wrestling with this and want to understand it. You raise one
(calibration) point below: the pressure you read will be less than
carb pressure by the height of the fluid column betwee the carb and
the transducer. Not sure how many inches of gasoline column equal one
p.s.i., but it varies with gasoline versus air because of the
differing densities. Same reason a barometer made with mercury is
only a few feet tall versus one with water at around 32 feet tall!

The way I look at it, the pressure at my air tool is at the same value
as at the compressor regulator (until I squeeze the trigger and air
flow in the line causes a "voltage drop" - I'm talking about static
pressure, such as we read in a fuel pressure line that dead-ends into
a transducer). To me this demonstrates that air sends its pressure
down the hose just like any other fluid, otherwise my pneumatic tools
would not work.

I still believe that when your fuel system pressurizes, everything in
the system, even trapped air, comes up to the same pressure and should
read as such on any transducer. If I'm mistaken, let me know;
meanwhile my air tools still work just dandy on this exact principle.
But as you say, I've been wrong before.

I only belabor the point b/c I'm not convinced that this could have
fixed the problem and you might need to keep investigating.

-Stormy

On 1/28/07, Steve Glasgow <willfly(at)carolina.rr.com> wrote:
[quote]

What about compressibility of a gas verses a liquid. Water pipes have air
trapped in them all the time to prevent hammer effect. The pressure sender
is up the line not down the line. Pressure is correct at the engine, just
not the pressure sender which is way above the carburetor. You may be
correct if the sender is plumbed at the carburetor but mine isn't. All I
know is it worked. No more oscillating fuel pressure.

Stormy, are you giving us bad coordinates again?

Love Cappy

---


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PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 5:58 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

Consider this: Removing the "air" may have been the mechanism that removed some other "trapped particle" that might have been affecting the transducer.

James
On 1/28/07, Bill Boyd <sportav8r(at)gmail.com (sportav8r(at)gmail.com)> wrote:[quote] --> RVSouthEast-List message posted by: "Bill Boyd" <sportav8r(at)gmail.com (sportav8r(at)gmail.com)>

Yeah, I've been known to lose my position fix on the internet before...

I'm wrestling with this and want to understand it. You raise one
(calibration) point below: the pressure you read will be less than
carb pressure by the height of the fluid column betwee the carb and
the transducer. Not sure how many inches of gasoline column equal one
p.s.i., but it varies with gasoline versus air because of the
differing densities. Same reason a barometer made with mercury is
only a few feet tall versus one with water at around 32 feet tall!

The way I look at it, the pressure at my air tool is at the same value
as at the compressor regulator (until I squeeze the trigger and air
flow in the line causes a "voltage drop" - I'm talking about static
pressure, such as we read in a fuel pressure line that dead-ends into
a transducer). To me this demonstrates that air sends its pressure
down the hose just like any other fluid, otherwise my pneumatic tools
would not work.

I still believe that when your fuel system pressurizes, everything in
the system, even trapped air, comes up to the same pressure and should
read as such on any transducer. If I'm mistaken, let me know;
meanwhile my air tools still work just dandy on this exact principle.
But as you say, I've been wrong before.

I only belabor the point b/c I'm not convinced that this could have
fixed the problem and you might need to keep investigating.

-Stormy

On 1/28/07, Steve Glasgow < willfly(at)carolina.rr.com (willfly(at)carolina.rr.com)> wrote:
[quote]

What about compressibility of a gas verses a liquid. Water pipes have air
trapped in them all the time to prevent hammer effect. The pressure sender
is up the line not down the line. Pressure is correct at the engine, just
not the pressure sender which is way above the carburetor. You may be
correct if the sender is plumbed at the carburetor but mine isn't. All I
know is it worked. No more oscillating fuel pressure.

Stormy, are you giving us bad coordinates again?

Love Cappy

---


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PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 6:31 am    Post subject: Fuel Pressure Fixed Reply with quote

One never knows.

Seems these transducers do have a troubled service history, though.
Swaping them out usually fixes whatever problem one is posting to the
list about Smile Steve's direct reading gauge will tell all when he
gets it hooked in.

-B

On 1/28/07, James Clark <jclarkmail(at)gmail.com> wrote:
[quote] Consider this: Removing the "air" may have been the mechanism that removed
some other "trapped particle" that might have been affecting the transducer.

James

On 1/28/07, Bill Boyd <sportav8r(at)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Yeah, I've been known to lose my position fix on the internet before...
>
> I'm wrestling with this and want to understand it. You raise one
> (calibration) point below: the pressure you read will be less than
> carb pressure by the height of the fluid column betwee the carb and
> the transducer. Not sure how many inches of gasoline column equal one
> p.s.i., but it varies with gasoline versus air because of the
> differing densities. Same reason a barometer made with mercury is
> only a few feet tall versus one with water at around 32 feet tall!
>
> The way I look at it, the pressure at my air tool is at the same value
> as at the compressor regulator (until I squeeze the trigger and air
> flow in the line causes a "voltage drop" - I'm talking about static
> pressure, such as we read in a fuel pressure line that dead-ends into
> a transducer). To me this demonstrates that air sends its pressure
> down the hose just like any other fluid, otherwise my pneumatic tools
> would not work.
>
> I still believe that when your fuel system pressurizes, everything in
> the system, even trapped air, comes up to the same pressure and should
> read as such on any transducer. If I'm mistaken, let me know;
> meanwhile my air tools still work just dandy on this exact principle.
> But as you say, I've been wrong before.
>
> I only belabor the point b/c I'm not convinced that this could have
> fixed the problem and you might need to keep investigating.
>
> -Stormy
>
> On 1/28/07, Steve Glasgow < willfly(at)carolina.rr.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> > What about compressibility of a gas verses a liquid. Water pipes have
air
> > trapped in them all the time to prevent hammer effect. The pressure
sender
> > is up the line not down the line. Pressure is correct at the engine,
just
> > not the pressure sender which is way above the carburetor. You may be
> > correct if the sender is plumbed at the carburetor but mine isn't.
All I
> > know is it worked. No more oscillating fuel pressure.
> >
> > Stormy, are you giving us bad coordinates again?
> >
> > Love Cappy
> >
> > ---


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