Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #43918
From: Mark Steitle <msteitle@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: 20B Update from Mark?
Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2008 14:24:22 -0500
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Al,
 
I had the fuel calibration pretty close at one time, then I sent the unit back for an upgrade and had to start over with calibration.  I can see that we generally use the same procedure for calibration.  I did use care to calibrate my capaicitive probes very accurately, so I give them more credence at this stage of the game than the EM-2 readings.  The EFIS gives me totals in each tank, and the EM-2 gives me total fule on board. 
 
Here's the process I have been using:  Power up the EFIS and let it stabilize, total the readings from both tanks, then change the value in the EM-2 to agree.  That gives me a starting point.  I then compare readings after the flight, and again after adding fuel.  After doing this a few times, I can see which way the EM-2 is off and I can tweak the calibration and then repeat the process.  After a while, it is pretty close.  But like I said, I had it close until I sent it in for an upgrade.  I really need to write stuff down.  ;-)
 
Mark 

On Tue, Sep 9, 2008 at 10:59 AM, Al Gietzen <ALVentures@cox.net> wrote:

Currently the fuel burn is registering high, resulting in a fuel remaining reading lower than what I actually have in the tanks.  I hadn't made the connection between that and the GPH reading, but now I see that they are inter-related.  I usually don't fill the tanks to the brim as I can carry 96 gallons total but I only fly about 100-150 miles round trip.  Why carry all that extra weight.

Mark;

I rarely fill my tanks either.  I have a calibrated dip stick I use to measure the fuel at one point; then keep track of how much I add over a series of flights; then measure again.  Then compare actual measured with EM2 readout, and adjust the FFCAL as discussed in the manual. I have found that difference between EM2 totalizer and measured is different for a 4-5 hr flight than for a series of shorter flights, which I guess isn't too surprising, but it gets you close until you make those long flights.

96 gallons – wow, that should give you quite a range.

Al

 


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