Return-Path: Received: from mail.viclink.com ([66.129.220.6] verified) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 4.2b3) with ESMTP id 90591 for flyrotary@lancaironline.net; Wed, 26 May 2004 08:23:05 -0400 Received: from mail.viclink.com (p144.AS1.viclink.com [66.129.192.144]) by mail.viclink.com (8.11.7/8.11.7) with ESMTP id i4QCMKC72723 for ; Wed, 26 May 2004 05:22:20 -0700 (PDT) Message-ID: <40B48B87.8040405@mail.viclink.com> Date: Wed, 26 May 2004 05:20:23 -0700 From: Perry Mick User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Win95; en-US; rv:1.0.1) Gecko/20020823 Netscape/7.0 X-Accept-Language: en-us, en MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Rotary motors in aircraft Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Fuel Pump Design References: Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="------------050201000208090307030409" X-RAVMilter-Version: 8.4.3(snapshot 20030217) (mail.viclink.com) --------------050201000208090307030409 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Very good to bring this up Mark. I think this is not an issue with the fuel pumps inside a sump tank, the arrangement I have. If the sump tank runs dry, switching to the other tank refills it. The sump tank must have it's own vent line. Tracy Crook wrote: > Good point Mark. This sounds like another good argument for the > arrangement that I use. > > Always draw & return to the same tank. Refill from the other tank > when necessary using a low pressure facet fuel pump. This eliminates > the need to ever run the tank in use low and risk running dry (unless > you are really OUT of gas). No fuel selector needed. Simple > plumbing. Only requires a single return port. Eliminates that > nervous moment when you wonder "Should I switch tanks now or use that > last gallon of fuel in the tank & risk running dry". > > Tracy > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Mark Steitle > Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2004 4:12 PM > To: Rotary motors in aircraft > Subject: [FlyRotary] Fuel Pump Design > > Fuel system design hasn't come up in quite a while. But since a > large portion of accidents are fuel related, I thought this would > be worthy of discussion. > > I have experienced a failure mode during ground runs on my Lancair > ES with 20B that seems to be a problem with other types of > installations as well. I recently read a first flight report by a > professional test pilot, David Allen, that almost had to set a > Lancair ES, N711RG, down on I-70 due to the inability to restart > the engine after running a tank dry. (See > www.geocities.com/daveandjj for the full story.) This was a > certified fuel-injected engine installation. Also, the Subaru > guys (I have been lurking on the Eggenfelder Subie site today) had > a similar situation, resulting in some glider time and a > dead-stick landing. > > The problem is that after exhausting the fuel in one tank an > airlock forms between the fuel pump(s) and the fuel pressure > regulator that the efi pump cannot overcome due to lack of fuel in > the supply line. This is what I have experienced with my > installation on ground runs. I can't get the efi pumps to > re-prime unless I momentarily break a line loose between the pump > outlet and the pressure regulator. As soon as I do that the pump > will re-prime and all is well. > > For the record, I have two of Tracy's efi pumps, with two efi > filters, hooked in parallel. They are mounted low on the fire > wall. Upstream is a gascolator and an Andair 6-port selector > valve. Downstream of the pumps/filters is a map sensing pressure > regulator. There is a -6AN going to the fuel rail, and a -4 > return line back to the Andair valve/tank. > > I was curious if anyone else has had this happen and what they did > to resolve the issue. I have come up with two possible solutions. > > 1. Tee off the pump output and put an electric solenoid valve in > the line and tee the outlet of the solenoid to the fuel return > line, past the regulator. Push-button switch on panel would > activate the solenoid. If needed, a second or two of activation > should relieve the air-lock and allow the pumps to re-prime. > > 2. Install a bleed line around the pressure regulator with a > small metering orifice (.020-.030") that would bleed off any air > that might get trapped. (This appears to be the solution the > Subaru group is focusing on). This would be a full time bypass. > This seems to be the simpler solution. > > 3. Install a low pressure, high volume fuel pump in one, or both, > of the wing tanks. Procedure would be to always keep reserve fuel > in this tank. > > Any comments from seasoned flyers would be welcomed. > > Mark S. > --------------050201000208090307030409 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Very good to bring this up Mark. I think this is not an issue with the fuel pumps inside a sump tank, the arrangement I have. If the sump tank runs dry, switching to the other tank refills it. The sump tank must have it's own vent line.

Tracy Crook wrote:
Good point Mark.  This sounds like another good argument for the arrangement that I use.
 
Always draw & return to the same tank.  Refill from the other tank when necessary using a low pressure facet fuel pump.  This eliminates the need to ever run the tank in use low and risk running dry (unless you are really OUT of gas).  No fuel selector needed.  Simple plumbing.  Only requires a single return port.  Eliminates that nervous moment when you wonder "Should I switch tanks now or use that last gallon of fuel in the tank & risk running dry". 
 
Tracy
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Mark Steitle
Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2004 4:12 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Fuel Pump Design
 
Fuel system design hasn't come up in quite a while.  But since a large portion of accidents are fuel related, I thought this would be worthy of discussion.

I have experienced a failure mode during ground runs on my Lancair ES with 20B that seems to be a problem with other types of installations as well.  I recently read a first flight report by a professional test pilot, David Allen, that almost had to set a Lancair ES, N711RG, down on I-70 due to the inability to restart the engine after running a tank dry.  (See www.geocities.com/daveandjj for the full story.)  This was a certified fuel-injected engine installation.  Also, the Subaru guys (I have been lurking on the Eggenfelder Subie site today) had a similar situation, resulting in some glider time and a dead-stick landing. 

The problem is that after exhausting the fuel in one tank an airlock forms between the fuel pump(s) and the fuel pressure regulator that the efi pump cannot overcome due to lack of fuel in the supply line.  This is what I have experienced with my installation on ground runs.  I can't get the efi pumps to re-prime unless I momentarily break a line loose between the pump outlet and the pressure regulator.  As soon as I do that the pump will re-prime and all is well. 

For the record, I have two of Tracy's efi pumps, with two efi filters, hooked in parallel.  They are mounted low on the fire wall.  Upstream is a gascolator and an Andair 6-port selector valve.  Downstream of the pumps/filters is a map sensing pressure regulator.  There is a -6AN going to the fuel rail, and a -4 return line back to the Andair valve/tank.

I was curious if anyone else has had this happen and what they did to resolve the issue.  I have come up with two possible solutions. 

1.  Tee off the pump output and put an electric solenoid valve in the line and tee the outlet of the solenoid to the fuel return line, past the regulator.  Push-button switch on panel would activate the solenoid.  If needed, a second or two of activation should relieve the air-lock and allow the pumps to re-prime.

2.  Install a bleed line around the pressure regulator with a small metering orifice (.020-.030") that would bleed off any air that might get trapped.  (This appears to be the solution the Subaru group is focusing on).  This would be a full time bypass.  This seems to be the simpler solution.

3.  Install a low pressure, high volume fuel pump in one, or both, of the wing tanks.  Procedure would be to always keep reserve fuel in this tank. 

Any comments from seasoned flyers would be welcomed.

Mark S.

--------------050201000208090307030409--