Hi Steve,
My personal experience was (and has been
over the past 10 years) that IF your header tank is “air tight”
then the fuel injected from the header tank into the engine creates a pressure
differential that is sufficient to pull fuel at least 24” vertical while “sucking”
a heavy plastic marine fuel tank almost flat (because I forgot to open the
vent). While its not the pumps directly – they simply push fuel to the
injectors – and hopefully remain fuel saturated – its actually the
pressure differential in the header tank this causes that pulls the fuel from
the tank. You could argue I’m splitting hairs but I think it makes a
difference whether the pump is trying to suck uphill directly or it’s the
header tanks pressure differential.
However, I would hesitate to eliminate a
boost/transfer pump for the simply reason it would not take much of an air leak
to lose that suction from the header tank and without a boost pump ( or gravity
feed), there just might be difficulty getting sufficient fuel to the engine to
keep it running.
In my assessment an inexpensive Facet type
6 psi pump (Sold by Van’s aircraft) is well worth the insurance it
provides. Also as I indicated - it provide sufficient pressure way back when
to suppress fuel percolation.
I always believe that what may be good for
me or you depends on our assessment of the risk involved and your risk
tolerance profile.
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf
Of stevei@carey.asn.au
Sent: Wednesday, October 07, 2009
8:39 AM
To: Rotary
motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Fuel
System
Thanks Ed
The header tank in a Glasair is immediately behind the firewall (Insulated) and
glassed into the fuse upper section immediately ahead of the windshield.
The header is approx 24” above the main wing tank.
Are you suggesting then that if the header has no air leaks then the main pump
suction could be used to draw fuel from main wing tank up into header and
delete the transfer pump?
Steve Izett
On 6/10/09 6:18 PM, "Ed Anderson" <eanderson@carolina.rr.com> wrote:
I don’t really know, Steve.
I do have a fiberglass box around the header tank and pumps/filters
with aluminum tape wrapped over it to shield from radiate heat. I also
have a blast tube funneling air into the box.
Early on during test phase when running auto fuel and doing power on stalls
(high power, low airflow), I notice the fuel pressure fluctuating and turned on
the 6 psi boost pump which eliminated the symptoms. I then installed the
box and blast tube and have had no more such symptoms.
In hind sight, putting the header tank someplace other than forward of the
firewall would undoubtedly been a better plan.
The pressure differential with just the EFI fuel pumps is sufficient to pull
fuel up a 2 foot height and collapsed a heavy plastic marine fuel tank when I
once forgot to open it’s vent during the phase I had the engine on a test
stand. So the pressure differential is sufficient. The only thing
that would cause a problem is a air leak in the header tank, then I would be
forced to use the boost pump to keep fuel flowing to land as the pressure
differential would be lost/weakened.
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
<http://www.andersonee.com>
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
<http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html>
http://www.flyrotary.com/
definitefraudstart
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From: Rotary
motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]
On Behalf Of stevei@carey.asn.au
Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009
9:36 PM
To: Rotary
motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Fuel
System
Thanks
Ed
How hot does fuel get as it gets pumped then through a hot engine cowl? The
lines are insulated under the cowl. How much heat do the pressure pumps
introduce?
Steve Izett
On 6/10/09 9:03 AM, "Ed Anderson" <eanderson@carolina.rr.com> wrote:
Hi Steve,
Just for comparison -my fuel system is very similar in concept. The
principal conceptual difference is I have a header tank for return of my fuel
from injectors mounted on the fire wall and is ½ pint in capacity. The
theory is not much fuel to have to get rid of if it gets hot. The fuel flow
into the engine through the injectors continuously pulls cool fuel from wing
tanks.
8 gallons of hot fuel (if it ever got hot) might take a while to burn
down to the point the cool incoming fuel does some good.
This size goes counter to “tradition” on size of header tanks
but is more in line with the “returnless” systems on most of
today’s automobiles.
FWIW
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
<http://www.andersonee.com>
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
<http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html>
http://www.flyrotary.com/
definitefraudstart
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From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]
On Behalf Of stevei@carey.asn.au
Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009
7:35 PM
To: Rotary
motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Fuel System
Hi
All
We are trying to make a decision re: fuel system.
I’ve attached a PDF with design and questions etc.
Could you please pull it to pieces, make recommendations?
Steve Thomas can you comment also from the GSIIRG perspective?
Thanks
Steve Izett
Perth Western
Australia
Building Glasair SIIRG Renesis 4 Port RD1C EC2 EM3
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