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Hi,
I am doing doing an Embedded Design course.Here i get "Advanced fuel flow mesurement system using microcontroller" as a project topic.But i dont know much about the topic.How to measure the fuel. Anybody who did/doing some work on it please help me out of this problem. I need the guidence to start it.If anybody guide me i will be grateful to him. Regards Khanindra j. Deka |
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I am doing doing an Embedded Design course.Here i get "Advanced fuel
flow mesurement system using microcontroller" as a project topic.But i dont know much about the topic.How to measure the fuel. Anybody who did/doing some work on it please help me out of this problem. I need the guidence to start it.If anybody guide me i will be grateful to him. You go and get yourself a fuel flow meter, hook its output up to a microcontroller discrete logic input, and count the pulses over time. The fuel flow meter documentation will tell you how many pulses equals how much fuel, look at the K factor. The pulses are created by a little wheel turning in the flow stream. JPI (www.jpinstruments.com) sells fuel flow meters, and you should look at their online JPI-700 or 800 user's guide for how to calibrate the K factor of the fuel flow. Also check the catalogs like Aircraft Spruce and Chief for flow meters. |
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Richard Riley wrote:
They sell a lot of flow meters in the marine industry - it's just as bad to run out of fuel in a boat 20 miles off shore as in a light plane. http://www.measureanything.com/produ...ter_201B-6.asp Well almost usually the landings a little softer in the boat, depending on weather conditions! g John |
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![]() "UltraJohn" wrote Well almost usually the landings a little softer in the boat, depending on weather conditions! g John Reminds me of the joke about the airliner having engines quit, and getting later and later, and the one guy that says, "damn, if we lose that last one, we'll be up here all day" With the boat you get that softer landing, and you have longer before you die, after running out of gas. :-) -- Jim in NC |
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