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#1
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I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of
their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. Am I just overly compulsive about maintenance or are these people nuts? -- Roger Long |
#2
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In article , "Roger Long"
om wrote: I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. Am I just overly compulsive about maintenance or are these people nuts? ouch, those people are nuts. -- Bob Noel |
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"Roger Long" wrote:
Am I just overly compulsive about maintenance or are these people nuts? Fairly common attitude, I've found. It's a big reason I stopped renting and bought an airplane. An FBO I used to rent from had a 172 with a primer that would squirt fuel all over your hand every time you used it. Their idea of fixing it was to tell everyone *not* to use it. Another place had a Warrior with an amp meter that always read a high rate. Their advice: "Ignore it; it's always been like that." -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
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Skyhawks overflow as well but through the vent. It's the part about being
related to flap position that gives me the willies. That tells me fuel is in the wing someplace other than the tanks. -- Roger Long G.R. Patterson III wrote in message ... Roger Long wrote: I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. Am I just overly compulsive about maintenance or are these people nuts? As delivered from the factory, Maules spill fuel when completely filled. Owners learn not to completely fill the tanks. If the flying club people are nuts, then Maule owners ...... Never mind. George Patterson The British drink warm beer because they all own Lucas refrigerators. |
#5
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![]() Roger Long wrote: I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. Am I just overly compulsive about maintenance or are these people nuts? As delivered from the factory, Maules spill fuel when completely filled. Owners learn not to completely fill the tanks. If the flying club people are nuts, then Maule owners ...... Never mind. George Patterson The British drink warm beer because they all own Lucas refrigerators. |
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"Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ...
Their advice: "Ignore it; it's always been like that." Seems very reasonable. I have a CHT gauge in my Mooney that reads 20 degrees low (we tested the gauge to determine this). I'm not willing to send Mooney $2000 of my money for a new gauge cluster (especially since I have an EDM). So my advice to anyone flying my Mooney is to just acknowledge that it reads low and use the EDM instead. In your Archer, if the gauge ever read zero, it would get your attention. If it read higher than the high it usually reads, it would get your attention. Seems like the gauge is doing its job. We're not trying to measure down to the milliamp here, those types of debugging are best done on the ground with real equipment. -Robert |
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"Roger Long" om wrote in message ...
I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. How much fuel? Some planes always leak fuel, the FAA has an approved method to determine if a Mooney is airworthy by measuring how bad the leak it. Even a great 172 in perfect share will leak fuel when sitting at an angle with full tanks and the selctor on "both". Perhaps they are waiting on a part? In anycase, I wouldn't ground a plane for a small leak, if you did 1/2 the planes out there would be on the ground. -Robert |
#8
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"Roger Long" om wrote in message ...
I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. Am I just overly compulsive about maintenance or are these people nuts? BTW: Since I said something about Mooney, I feel I must say something about Bonanzas too. ![]() if filled to the top unless both the internal and external cap rings are replaced regularly (and most are not). -Robert |
#9
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Yes, but here they were saying that the leak was due to a known defect that
would be fixed. Fuel pours out of the vent on our 172 all the time while we are taxiing, that's what the vent is there for. If you knew that the pipe that was intended to conduct overflow fuel from the tank to the ground was sending it somewhere else in your Mooney or Maule, would you keep flying it? -- Roger Long Robert M. Gary wrote in message m... "Roger Long" om wrote in message ... I was looking over the web site of a flying club that posts the minutes of their meetings. One item said that fuel was running out of the wing of their 172 when the flaps were fully extended because the overflow drain was broken. They asked that the tanks not be completely filled until this could be fixed. How much fuel? Some planes always leak fuel, the FAA has an approved method to determine if a Mooney is airworthy by measuring how bad the leak it. Even a great 172 in perfect share will leak fuel when sitting at an angle with full tanks and the selctor on "both". Perhaps they are waiting on a part? In anycase, I wouldn't ground a plane for a small leak, if you did 1/2 the planes out there would be on the ground. -Robert |
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