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Are you putting in a lavatory in your
Legacy?
From: Lancair Mailing
List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf
Of Kevin Kossi
Sent: Saturday, January 01, 2011
5:29 PM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: [LML] Re: post crash fire
control
I have been thinking about this for some time and am glad the occasion
has come up to discuss it.
I am building a Legacy and was trying to figure out how to incorporate
a dump valve into each wing to dump the fuel for certain cases of emergency
landings or imminent crash.
So far I came up with this valve:
they offer it with a stainless steel paddle in 2" & 3",
one could be mounted at the bottom of each wing at the lowest spot to dump the
fuel.
I haven't really done much research into wether or not the aviation
industry offers such a valve, or the compatibility of the materials with the
fuel or the reliability or temperature and pressure limits, or how air will get
into the tank to replace the fuel, but it seams like the logical general
direction?
Of course, one fear would be inadvertent dumping of the fuel or leaks.
On Dec 31, 2010, at 1:10 AM, REHBINC wrote:
I am a forensic engineer and work
quite a bit with fire and explosion as well as mechanical/structural failure.
If I had a way to drain the fuel before
crashing, I would get the tanks as dry as possible. A couple ounces of gasoline
trapped somewhere in the tank would be plenty to make the space fuel rich. It
isn't realistic to expect the entire tank to be fuel rich before impact, but a
portion of it certainly will be. It is all a matter of time and temperature. In
tank ships, you need around 2 gallons or so to make the space fuel rich.
Frequently there is more than this trapped behind the tank scale.
For the reasons stated earlier, I
wouldn't be too concerned about an explosion risk of the wing tanks (At least
as long as I wasn't standing on it at the time!). My biggest concern would be
the size of the fuel puddle the plane came to rest in. A hundred gallons spread
out on the runway could make a real big fire real fast and would be
difficult to survive if you were caught in the middle. Two cups of gas in the
same scenario would be a much more survivable situation.
Another benefit of draining the tanks
before impact is the reduction in gross weight and therefore stall/impact
speed.
Rob, interesting info.
So sounds like if you do have a quick
drain, you don't want to completely empty it.
I have no idea how to build a quick drain
that would not create some leakage risk.
sounds like you are in this business?
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