Return-Path: Received: from marvkaye.olsusa.com ([205.245.9.212]) by truman.olsusa.com (Post.Office MTA v3.1.2 release (PO203-101c) ID# 0-44819U2500L250S0) with SMTP id AAA25616 for ; Mon, 12 Oct 1998 10:09:30 -0400 Message-Id: <3.0.3.32.19981012100853.00af1018@olsusa.com> Date: Mon, 12 Oct 1998 10:08:53 -0400 To: lancair.list@olsusa.com From: N295VV@aol.com (by way of Marvin Kaye ) Subject: Re: 320 automatic gas refill X-Mailing-List: lancair.list@olsusa.com Mime-Version: 1.0 <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> << Lancair Builders' Mail List >> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> From: n295vv@aol.com Thirty years ago, or so, I invented an auto refill container system for use in the semiconductor industry. The system involved two optical sensors-one for high level and one for low level--that would be wetted by any liquid, including gasoline. They looked like pencils. When the tip of the point was wetted by the liquid, an infrared beam pointing down the axis of the rod would be reflected back up the axis, and was detected by an infrared collector. When the rod wasnt wetted, the emitted beam would not reflect back to the collector sensor. The rod sensors were sealed into the unit with a stainless fitting and were sealed with tefzel compression fittings. The pointed rods could be made of any optically clear material that would allow IR beams to pass through but would be inert to av gas. A simple logic system was used to autorefill the container that was being sensed. They were very safe--nothing electrical was in the inside of the container, and the external sensors were extremely low voltage diodes. Perhaps this system or its components are currently on the market, and can be modified--look around. David Jones Pecatonica, Illinois