X-Virus-Scanned: clean according to Sophos on Logan.com From: "Ernest Christley" Received: from nm44-vm5.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com ([98.138.120.245] verified) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 6.0.10) with ESMTPS id 7242235 for flyrotary@lancaironline.net; Wed, 29 Oct 2014 09:36:24 -0400 Received-SPF: none receiver=logan.com; client-ip=98.138.120.245; envelope-from=echristley@att.net Received: from [127.0.0.1] by nm44.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 29 Oct 2014 13:35:49 -0000 Received: from [98.138.100.111] by nm44.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 29 Oct 2014 13:32:49 -0000 Received: from [66.196.81.157] by tm100.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 29 Oct 2014 13:32:49 -0000 Received: from [66.196.81.130] by tm3.access.bullet.mail.bf1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 29 Oct 2014 13:32:49 -0000 Received: from [127.0.0.1] by omp1006.access.mail.bf1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 29 Oct 2014 13:32:48 -0000 X-Yahoo-Newman-Property: ymail-4 X-Yahoo-Newman-Id: 995104.48248.bm@omp1006.access.mail.bf1.yahoo.com Received: (qmail 20652 invoked by uid 60001); 29 Oct 2014 13:32:48 -0000 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=att.net; s=s1024; t=1414589568; bh=aCnfFBLTohYWepKoyffkNFgPHlCOxmzOcDWBE8zZHqo=; h=References:Message-ID:Date:From:Reply-To:Subject:To:In-Reply-To:MIME-Version:Content-Type; b=TLdPAuZ/vuV1pnu0U5dKW2ONgUrSd/UFVX+E+9qmEIkk9zeNkzKfZYekQvmgCYTjhLkrYO2C1h/lpo1qhQptAqZKJ5v6qalrj43aIWuV/2b2uTtt0iuhvUuxteUjKJ9I0yjTnVYBEMJ5SM3Hx7DL48lq8iNPoS96U4XEIwG9pno= X-YMail-OSG: pyK3adIVM1lEKpmEeAte.HmB_X_bF_TtVdqP_bV_vOpgeVE BNKuPCiBdM3X_c7kEpVmU2RYuSLFk642ge0MrLH8h2af6ND6d_q5xpcTw2md _VKaBVFxlw.hgTbG54Zq5w4OJH.ieDAEoyNLc6PTi3OXOLbubUY3Q8H7c0CS 2_h5C.duio5TIGO9ocRhOJSpY00aDzAjqQ40b6XPjIAx.q2_4j0ng2E9VhLt PVMjoWn28IyIuRZKZz__zqjSakEBV4crsE.HnKRPby1QCCmbTVI6JLws29.X 8h05aKE2MkXTyD88N40713EnXsBWekETSMcJrRhu_DDZrdlqk_nIQFLLerYi ylfA4KOy.bxxNvwd7.AVog4r9VQpVpTjiB4QAoQxwFfviNuG_l6EG6Djnx0f 7Gsnz7dyezE2gnzH85T19ZSDsXicfyxRB4Y6WNelg6ButfttnP5rhOA3gqP5 debvfhxwoH47F1o3vu4tDLsCyg41a41uZFR4.zPZnalQnIbu5GnumaEuuCWZ PWwMqXs2q4hd4HgDhCkJ0Fae6ulGaGteqgvb2Np72LXlq Received: from [67.202.75.55] by web181604.mail.ne1.yahoo.com via HTTP; Wed, 29 Oct 2014 06:32:48 PDT X-Rocket-MIMEInfo: 002.001,CgoKCk9uIFR1ZXNkYXksIE9jdG9iZXIgMjgsIDIwMTQgOToyNiBQTSwgTWFyayBTdGVpdGxlIDxmbHlyb3RhcnlAbGFuY2Fpcm9ubGluZS5uZXQ.IHdyb3RlOgogCgoKPlNpeCBQU0kgaXMgb25lIHRoaW5nLCA0MCBwc2kgaXMgbXVjaCBkaWZmZXJlbnQuICBJJ3ZlIGV4cGVyaWVuY2VkIHRvbyBtYW55IGNyYWNrZWQgcGxhc3RpYyBwYXJ0cyBvbiBjYXJzLCB0cnVja3MgYW5kCj5SVidzIHRvIGZlZWwgY29tZm9ydGFibGUgcHV0dGluZyBtZSBhbmQgbXkgZmFtaWx5IGluc2lkZSBhIGNhYmluIHdpdGggYSBwbGEBMAEBAQE- X-Mailer: YahooMailWebService/0.8.203.733 References: Message-ID: <1414589568.87636.YahooMailNeo@web181604.mail.ne1.yahoo.com> Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2014 06:32:48 -0700 Reply-To: Ernest Christley Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: electric fuel selector valves To: Rotary motors in aircraft In-Reply-To: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="2017413661-2069592541-1414589568=:87636" --2017413661-2069592541-1414589568=:87636 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii On Tuesday, October 28, 2014 9:26 PM, Mark Steitle wrote: >Six PSI is one thing, 40 psi is much different. I've experienced too many cracked plastic parts on cars, trucks and >RV's to feel comfortable putting me and my family inside a cabin with a plastic RV fuel valve. A small crack under >40 psi can cause a very real fire hazard. To me, this is a no-brainer. I have to give you that. I'm not sure I would want to put a plastic valve under pressure and expect it to operate reliably either. 40psi really isn't all THAT much, but I'd still want to design the system so that plastic parts came before the pumps. Did the cracks you experienced have a common theme (barbs breaking off? body of the valve cracking open? mostly located in the engine compartment where heat would prematurely age them?) I ask so that I can avoid a hidden snake, if at all possible. >If its the cost of a quality aircraft quality valve, then get a part time job and save up your lunch money. That's my reasoning. Cost is one thing. Defining "quality" is another. That goes back to replacing the 1000lb rope with a 100,000lb chain. The rope is sufficient, but the chain is "better", because it is stronger, even though it causes a host of its own problems. It is heavy. It doesn't roll smoothly through a pulley. It will rust. In my case, the only fuel leak problems I've had were at the AN's metal to metal fittings. What really grates though is design mismatches. Everyone is using stiff, steel braided hoses to connect a stationary firewall to a vibrating carb, the vibrational stress being absorbed by an aluminum fitting. We go to extreme lengths to avoid NPT fittings on the ends of tubes and hoses, mainly by screwing NPT-AN adapters into all the NPT holes. We use steel braided hose to protect against "abrasion", when everyone knows a properly laid out system should not have hoses rubbing (and what is done to protect what it was abrading against?). We use steel braided hose to protect the hose from fire, as if a porous metal screen will somehow slow the heat down. Now Steve relates that his father was convinced by a racing guy that a steel braid will somehow protect the rubber inside from ethanol incompatibility. At some point the lack of logic assaults the senses and you just have to stop and say, "WTF, guys?! What were we building again?" >Oh, one more thing... my kit included a 6-way Andair valve. So, the decision was easy. hehe. Yeah, that does make a difference 8*) --2017413661-2069592541-1414589568=:87636 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii



On Tuesday, October 28, 2014 9:26 PM, Mark Steitle <flyrotary@lancaironline.net> wrote:


>Six PSI is one thing, 40 psi is much different.  I've experienced too many cracked plastic parts on cars, trucks and
>RV's to feel comfortable putting me and my family inside a cabin with a plastic RV fuel valve.  A small crack under
>40 psi can cause a very real fire hazard.  To me, this is a no-brainer. 

I have to give you that.  I'm not sure I would want to put a plastic valve under pressure and expect it to operate reliably either.  40psi really isn't all THAT much, but I'd still want to design the system so that plastic parts came before the pumps.

Did the cracks you experienced have a common theme (barbs breaking off?  body of the valve cracking open? mostly located in the engine compartment where heat would prematurely age them?)  I ask so that I can avoid a hidden snake, if at all possible. 

>If its the cost of a quality aircraft quality valve, then get a part time job and save up your lunch money.  That's my reasoning. 

Cost is one thing.
Defining "quality" is another.  That goes back to replacing the 1000lb rope with a 100,000lb chain.  The rope is sufficient, but the chain is "better", because it is stronger, even though it causes a host of its own problems.  It is heavy.  It doesn't roll smoothly through a pulley.  It will rust.  In my case, the only fuel leak problems I've had were at the AN's metal to metal fittings. 
What really grates though is design mismatches.  Everyone is using stiff, steel braided hoses to connect a stationary firewall to a vibrating carb, the vibrational stress being absorbed by an aluminum fitting.  We go to extreme lengths to avoid NPT fittings on the ends of tubes and hoses, mainly by screwing NPT-AN adapters into all the NPT holes.  We use steel braided hose to protect against "abrasion", when everyone knows a properly laid out system should not have hoses rubbing (and what is done to protect what it was abrading against?).  We use steel braided hose to protect the hose from fire, as if a porous metal screen will somehow slow the heat down.  Now Steve relates that his father was convinced by a racing guy that a steel braid will somehow protect the rubber inside from ethanol incompatibility.  At some point the lack of logic assaults the senses and you just have to stop and say, "WTF, guys?!  What were we building again?"

>Oh, one more thing... my kit included a 6-way Andair valve.  So, the decision was easy.

hehe.  Yeah, that does make a difference  8*)
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