From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]
Sent: Tuesday, November 04, 2014
8:13 AM
To: Rotary
motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: SPAM-LOW:
[FlyRotary] Re: Fw: Rotary Engine & Fuel Valves
If you are going to use a common feed system, the best way
to do it is via a Left/Right/Both/Off type selector valve.
With that system if you are running on “Both” and you
have an uneven feed, it’s easy to resolve, just switch to the fullest tank.
More important is the missing fuel cap scenario. Most
aircraft have a vent tube that is situated is such a manner that it works like
a little ram air scoop to force air into the vent system.
Most pilots think that when you loose a fuel tank cap, the
fuel is sucked out ….. not so. What happens is the fuel tank without the cap
fails to pressurize the way the fuel tank with the cap does. As such (in
a “T” or common feed system) the higher pressure tank begins to push
the fuel into the lower pressure tank. Of course with no fuel cap, the low
pressure tank overfills an the excess fuel goes overboard.
Once the last of the fuel passes the common junction, you
have fuel starvation and one full tank of fuel that you cannot access. In a
system with the described selector valve, selecting between individual tanks
would make this a non-event. If you were running on “Both” you could empty
the high pressure side but once it started sputtering you could be back in
business by switching to the full tank (with no cap) and would still be able to
access that fuel.
Just something to consider. I just picked up n airplane
this past spring that had a common sump system. The first thing I did was
convert it to the system I described above. The owner said it didn’t feed from
the wing tanks evenly and he would have to land sometimes to let the fuel
settle out to an even level then press on. This selector valve setup allows you
to correct the issue in the air.