Adam suggested (as a thought experiment only!) pouring a cup of water into
a gas tank and then running the engine at high power to see what would
happen.
To extend the thought experiment, takeoff power in my Legacy burns a gallon
of gasoline every two minutes, or 0.5 gallons per minute. A cup of water,
if it somehow stayed together, would flush through the engine in about eight
seconds. That's probably faster than I could react and switch fuel tanks,
turn the boost pump on, and set up for best glide.
Of course, if that happened just as I cleared the departure end of the
runway, that could be a very long eight seconds. The point is that at
takeoff power, a slug of water in a well maintained fuel system would flush
itself through the engine in seconds.
I once owned a Caterpillar D2 bulldozer. It had big capital letters
cast into the Diesel fuel cap that is good advice for us all: "BUY
CLEAN FUEL. KEEP FUEL CLEAN."
Dennis
Legacy, 740 hours, no water detected in fuel sumps or gascolater so
far.
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