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George,
It's been a while and I don't have the schematics here right now. But I
am pretty certain that there is a return from the fuel pump. It would be
the middle line on the left side. The other two on the left side is the
nose gear hydraulics.
The blue fat line on the right side is the fuel feed line.
Question for the group: is it a problem it the fuel selector is leaking
a little internally. My wing tanks are "talking" to each other. If I
run one tank completely dry and the other tank is half full about 1/2
gal of fuel is moving from the full to the empty tank in about 24 hrs. I
noticed it when I run one tank dry and let the plane sit for a week or
so - it is just a habit that when I run low on fuel that I rather have
all my fuel in on tank (and plan my turns accordingly) instead of having
two almost empty tanks. I do not have any stains or fuel smell around
the fuel selector.
Ralf
-----Original Message-----
From: George Wehrung [mailto:gw5@me.com] Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2013 1:30 PM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: Question about Dukes Fuel Pumps
All,
A couple of questions about Dukes electric boost pumps. If the engine
driven fuel pump fails, can the Dukes electric boost pump, in the low
flow mode supply enough fuel to keep the IO-550 running, at what I would
guess a lower power setting to find a place to land?
I have noticed that some installations have both a prime button and have
a separate high flow mode incorporated into a a HIGH-OFF-LOW rocker
switch. My airplane only has a LOW-OFF selection for the boost pump in
addition to the push to engage Prime mode, which I have learned is the
High Flow mode for the boost pump. It does not seem to make sense that if one lost the engine driven fuel
pump that you would have to hold the prime button in order to have High
Flow mode from the electric boost pump to keep the engine running. Or,
should my airplane have the HIGH-OFF-LOW boost pump rocker switch
installed?
There doesn't seem to be any spec sheets available on the flow volume in
the High and Low modes of the Dukes Electric Boost pump.
Lastly, from what I have learned in the build manual that there must be
an internal bypass in the engine driven fuel pump if it fails? The
plumbing seems to be as follows: Fuel tank, fuel tank selector valve,
electric boost pump, firewall, gascolator, engine driven boost pump, and
then fuel distributor, and then injectors. I know there is a return line
from the engine driven boost pump back to the fuel selector valve. Thanks for the help
George
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