Hi Finn
Thanks for the reminder of my pump issue. Yes, you chose more wisely the pump capacity. Mine were way overkill.
So I’m thinking options are: 1. Fuel Pressure transducer fault - No - as this was confirmed by the mixture monitor and tune going out. 2. Power supply to pump via fault in termination or switch current path - Unlikely, given the slow reduction - I would imagine a faulty connection would create a less uniform symptom. 3. Alternator Battery voltage/current reduction over time - No - You would see this in the log. 4. Significant Fuel leak - No - Would think this would have become obvious on inspection and not intermittent. 5. Fuel Regulator - They are pretty simple but unsure if they can fail with this symptom? 6. Fuel filter blockage - Certainly this would have to be an obvious, but I take it you swapped this out. 7. Pump internal failure - Electrical - ? Mechanical breakage - ? Flow Path - blockage - unlikely if filtered effectively
Where is your pressure transducer in relation to Reg/Any post pump filtering/Flow Transducer/Rail?
If fuel regulator and filters can be discounted, I’m struggling to trust the pump. But your test had it sounding in good shape and to spec.
So frustrating.
Cheers
Steve
Thanks Steve.
From your March/April 2017 posts it was a GSL392 that failed (high
current draw/low pressure, even after you removed the insect you
found in the inlet).
So this afternoon I ran the pump for about an hour. Amp draw from
3.04 to 2.86 depending on voltage. Pressure between 43 and 40 psi
(also depending on voltage). No noticeable degradation. Of course
the difference with this test is that no fuel went to engine --
all recirculated through pressure regulator and back to tank. But
no signs of a failing pump in terms of higher current draw and
less pressure.
I guess I should put a temp probe on the pump and see what it
reads during flight to see if that could be a factor.
Finn
On 5/21/2022 9:01 PM, Stephen Izett stephen.izett@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Finn
I had from memory a 393 fail. Can’t recall the
symptoms sorry.
I test before takeoff and then run both pumps below
2ooo ft incase of failure.
I plan to instal a comparator relay board in fuel
pressure circuit to automatically bring on backup pump and
failure indicator.
So testing before flight becomes - switch off and
back on main engine pump. This will save amps and wear of backup
pump.
When I switch off a pump at WOT the engine dies
pretty much instantaneously and don't want to be fiddling with a
restart in the Glasair which glides like a brick with the gear
out in the breeze.
Regards
Steve Izett
Recently I noticed my fuel pressure being
low. Noticed because engine did not come up in power
when advancing to full throttle. Noticed mixture real
lean. Checking fuel pressure as low as 28 psi
(normally 35 and up to 40 at full throttle). Going over my engine logs since first flight
I now see that fuel pressure has been trending lower
through each flight -- more pronounced on longer
flights (40+ minutes). More and more pronounced over
the months and became really noticeable over last
month. Could explain why mixture tuning appeared
to have changed. Nice to have engine logs from
practically each flight.
But why? Pump getting weaker? My primary fuel pump is a GSL414. I figured
it was wasted energy to push way more fuel than needed
through the pressure regulator back to the tank. My secondary (backup) pump is a GSL393. When
turning that on, fuel pressure comes back up to where
it needs to be. Anyone have experience with failing or weak
EFI pumps, particularly the GSL414? Finn
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