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#1
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I bought our Piper Archer [PA28-181] just over a year ago from a Californian
owner and flew it home to it's new base in Ohio. On the flight home, we noticed on long climbs that the fuel pressure fell off from an indicated mid scale reading to about one third scale. In level cruise the indicated pressure returned to mid scale. Although we took the top cowl off at every stop to check carefully that we still had all the important bits still hanging on, we failed to notice that the gascolator had a slight fuel leak until a few days after we got the bird home. You need to remove the lower cowl to get access to the gascolator. Our A&P put a new bowl seal on the gascolator which cured the leak and appeared to cure the fuel pressure changes. A few months passed and then occasionally I noticed a slight fall off in fuel pressure when climbing. I concluded that the mechanical engine driven fuel pump must be getting tired and, to be safe, replaced it with a new pump three weeks ago. No change, the fuel pressure still falls off when climbing and returns to mid scale in level cruise. I also belong to the Taylorcraft Flying Club www.taylorcraftflyingclub.org. The club, these days, flies a fleet of three PA28's. Our PA28-180 has a similar fall off in fuel pressure when climbing. Ideas please ? Roy N5804F |
#2
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Roy Page wrote:
On the flight home, we noticed on long climbs that the fuel pressure fell off from an indicated mid scale reading to about one third scale. snip A few months passed and then occasionally I noticed a slight fall off in fuel pressure when climbing. I concluded that the mechanical engine driven fuel pump must be getting tired and, to be safe, replaced it with a new pump three weeks ago. No change, the fuel pressure still falls off when climbing and returns to mid scale in level cruise. snip Our PA28-180 has a similar fall off in fuel pressure when climbing. I don't know what causes it, but the PA28-180 I previously owned did this, too. First time I saw it, I made a precautionary landing, no trouble found. Like you, I went over everything and never found any fault. Eventually I concluded it was just a peculiarity of the model and was benign. If you find a way to fix it, let us all know. Dave |
#3
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In article et,
"Roy Page" wrote: I concluded that the mechanical engine driven fuel pump must be getting tired and, to be safe, replaced it with a new pump three weeks ago. No change, the fuel pressure still falls off when climbing and returns to mid scale in level cruise. Check the POH, I believe that Piper recommends that the fuel boost pump remain "on" during climb. JKG |
#4
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: Check the POH, I believe that Piper recommends that the fuel boost pump
: remain "on" during climb. The stock Piper fuel pump is marginal, especially on 180hp engines. I talked with Petersen at length about this when I bought his autofuel STC for our PA28/180. Bottom line is to get the STC certified, they had to replace the electric fuel pump due to "low fuel flow." My thought is the Piper system was marginal, but acceptable in the early 1960's when the TC was issued. Now, it's not considered enough, so the autofuel STC was required to "fix" it. FWIW, my plane drops some fuel pressure when the electric boost is off as well. In a full-power-on-stall, it reads about 0.5-1 psi without the electric on. With, it comes right back where it belongs. I believe it's not unsafe, although it *is* a bit unnerving.... just an idiosyncracy of the plane. -Cory ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#5
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Any chance you are looking at a partial vapor lock? Are the fuel lines
insulated? I heard from a couple of sources (though years ago) that Piper Cherokees are more prone to these problems than most other autofuel STC holders. |
#6
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Well you could be correct about a possible vapor lock.
As far as I can see the fuel lines are not insulated. The autofuel STC on an Archer calls for mods to the fuel system to prevent vapor locks. But I do run on 100LL which is less volatile that Regular Gas. But if the PA28 aircraft are prone to vapor locks, I would have expected to see an AD a long time ago ? Thanks for the input. Roy "nrp" wrote in message oups.com... Any chance you are looking at a partial vapor lock? Are the fuel lines insulated? I heard from a couple of sources (though years ago) that Piper Cherokees are more prone to these problems than most other autofuel STC holders. |
#7
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Roy Page wrote:
: Well you could be correct about a possible vapor lock. : As far as I can see the fuel lines are not insulated. : The autofuel STC on an Archer calls for mods to the fuel system to prevent : vapor locks. : But I do run on 100LL which is less volatile that Regular Gas. : But if the PA28 aircraft are prone to vapor locks, I would have expected to : see an AD a long time ago ? : Thanks for the input. My cherokee could be vapor lock, but I've seen it on three different cherokees that I've flown, with autofuel or on 100LL. The flow of the pump is just barely adequate. Petersen described the "ditch test" where they had to put the tail of the plane down in a "ditch" to get a high nose-up attitude. In the worst conditions, the stock fuel system was unable to deliver the flow rate with an acceptable safety margin. Thus the modifications to the fuel system for autofuel STC. What *really* bugs me is that a PA28-160 has to do the fuel mod for the STC, but if it's got low-compression pistons (i.e. PA28-140/150), the fuel mod isn't required. You tell me how changing the pistons (i.e. low compression vs. high compression) changes fuel flow. Safety through liability and regulation... -Cory ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#8
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It seems, from the initial comments that a fuel pressure fall off during
climb in PA28 aircraft is seen more often than I thought. As a mechanical engineer, I can concur that the engine driven fuel pump is only just keeping up with the full fuel flow needs of a 0-360. Which is the reasoning behind why I decided to fit a new fuel pump. My thinking was that the internal diaphragm was tired and could fail. Sound reasoning, but on the assumption that the pump was more than man enough to hold good fuel pressure. Not so maybe. Well where do I go from here ..... Roy wrote in message ... Roy Page wrote: : Well you could be correct about a possible vapor lock. : As far as I can see the fuel lines are not insulated. : The autofuel STC on an Archer calls for mods to the fuel system to prevent : vapor locks. : But I do run on 100LL which is less volatile that Regular Gas. : But if the PA28 aircraft are prone to vapor locks, I would have expected to : see an AD a long time ago ? : Thanks for the input. My cherokee could be vapor lock, but I've seen it on three different cherokees that I've flown, with autofuel or on 100LL. The flow of the pump is just barely adequate. Petersen described the "ditch test" where they had to put the tail of the plane down in a "ditch" to get a high nose-up attitude. In the worst conditions, the stock fuel system was unable to deliver the flow rate with an acceptable safety margin. Thus the modifications to the fuel system for autofuel STC. What *really* bugs me is that a PA28-160 has to do the fuel mod for the STC, but if it's got low-compression pistons (i.e. PA28-140/150), the fuel mod isn't required. You tell me how changing the pistons (i.e. low compression vs. high compression) changes fuel flow. Safety through liability and regulation... -Cory ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#9
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: Well where do I go from here .....
Piece of black tape to cover the fuel pressure gauge when you don't like what it reads? .... couldn't resist. ![]() -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#10
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Well that is what I wrote Cory, but I deleted it before sending my post :-)
Roy wrote in message ... : Well where do I go from here ..... Piece of black tape to cover the fuel pressure gauge when you don't like what it reads? ... couldn't resist. ![]() -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
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