I recall that my TR-182 would
vapour lock the firewall-mounted electric fuel pump on hot days. When testing
it before a start, it would spin freely indicating no pumping taking
place. Being carburetted and also gravity feed, engine hot starts were
not a problem.
For the problems described
with the small fuel injected Lycomings, one might consider putting a container
around the electric and engine driven fuel pumps and gascolator, and then
directing some blast air from the high pressure side of the engine baffles to
these locations via 5/8 inch or one inch SCAT tubing. The cooling flow
will keep these items cool during flight, and they will not heat soak as badly
after a shutdown because they start out (immediately after engine shutdown) at
lower temperature, and the cans surrounding them provide some insulation from
radiant heat bouncing around under the engine after shutdown.
My IO-550 installation kit
from Lancair came with a square aluminum can that mounts over the engine
driven fuel pump and floods the exterior of the pump with cool air conveyed via
a small SCAT tube. My electric fuel pump is in the passenger side foot
well per LIV normal installation procedures. Hot starts have never been a
problem.
I hope this helps. It
should be a readily solvable problem.
Fred Moreno