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#11
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: Do you guys carry a bucket to catch the gas you drain if you remain overnight somewhere? Eleven seconds minimum for each tip and six seconds for each main spills a lot of gas. Where did you get those numbers? Out of the AOM (POH for those whose planes are too young to remember the AOM). I imagine the 235 has similar numbers. Never heard that before -- we sump them into the clear plastic tube, check for debris and water, and go on our merry way... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#12
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Out of the AOM (POH for those whose planes are too young to remember the
AOM). I imagine the 235 has similar numbers. Wow. Obviously written in the days when gas was 45 cents a gallon, and there were no pollution laws. If I drained that much gas, the EPA would arrest me! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#13
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: Would have been nice if Piper had put the sump drain actuator *outside* on the belly near where you need to hold the collection bottle, wouldn't it? Even if it were behind some sort of door (like it is on the inside), it would have avoided all the passenger induced damage, as well as many of the gas spots on asphalt ramps. (I assume the 235 has a similar set up as a Six with the push down lever thingy behind the cheesy plastic door with the spring hinges). Maybe someone can come up with an STC to put the drain actuator on the belly where it belongs. Amen, Ray! Because of the absurd location, we simply don't drain the main sump as often as we should. (We, of course, sump the wing tanks before each flight.) Unless you've got another person who is willing to lay on their back in the snow, that central sump is darn near impossible to check. Sure, you can just "pee the plane" and dump it on the tarmac, but that ruins the asphalt and ****es off the Greenies. If the sump actuator were on the bottom of the plane near the drain, I'm sure we'd do it before every flight. More often, yes. Before every flight....somehow I doubt it. And the LEAST that Piper could have done was design the sump door properly. As it is now, the door isn't even held on with a hinge -- it's simply got a tab that is stuck through a slot in the plastic trim piece, and then held in place with a piece of spring steel. When the spring weakens over time, the door hangs open a tiny bit, which catches a back-seat passenger's shoe when they're stepping down into the plane. That puts an impossible bending force on the plastic, and tears the door right out. Amen, Brother, Amen. Those doors must be getting scarcer then hen's teeth these days. I've managed not to mangle the second one since I've owned the plane (10 yrs, ~1000 hrs). The trick seems to be being careful to only open the door the minimum required to get your finger in there so that the springs don't get sprung. As long as the door closes fully, it doesn't seem to catch feet. Still, if someone came up with an STC for a belly actuator, it would also get rid of that annoying door inspection AD. Still would have the 50 hour valve check one though, but it sure would be easier. Can't tell you how many times I've missed while trying to get the plane to pee in the cup for the 50hr drug test. Any takers for developing an STC'd sump drain lever? If not that, then how about a threaded nipple that you could screw a collection bottle onto? I've tried clear hose, but it never wants to stay put on the nipple. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#14
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Adjusted for inflation, gas is quite a bit cheaper now than it was then...
Jay Honeck wrote: Out of the AOM (POH for those whose planes are too young to remember the AOM). I imagine the 235 has similar numbers. Wow. Obviously written in the days when gas was 45 cents a gallon, and there were no pollution laws. If I drained that much gas, the EPA would arrest me! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#15
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Don Tuite wrote:
Do you guys carry a bucket to catch the gas you drain if you remain overnight somewhere? Eleven seconds minimum for each tip and six seconds for each main spills a lot of gas. I put a bucket in the nose baggage compartment of my flying clubs Six 300. I don't think anyone but me and those I have trained know what it is used for. We are also probably the only ones who do the "one-Misssissipi, two-Mississippi... etc" count as you mentioned. |
#16
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Use one of the kid's sand buckets. The one I put in the Six was one we
picked up on a trip. A wide mouth bucket is easiest to postion and allow for wind drift. |
#17
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Last time I tried that, the bucket blew halfway to the runway in the time it
took me to get on the wing and back. Guess I could put a big rock in it, but then I don't really feel much like eating into my useful load to carry a rock around (ever try to find a big rock on an airport ramp?). john smith wrote: Use one of the kid's sand buckets. The one I put in the Six was one we picked up on a trip. A wide mouth bucket is easiest to postion and allow for wind drift. -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#18
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In article _MhRb.160023$na.268733@attbi_s04, Jay Honeck
wrote: Do you guys carry a bucket to catch the gas you drain if you remain overnight somewhere? Eleven seconds minimum for each tip and six seconds for each main spills a lot of gas. Where did you get those numbers? Piper PA32-300 Information Manual (Issued July 1973), Chapter 2 "Airplane and Systems", "Fuel System" Piper PA32-300 Infomration Manual (Issued August 1976, revised September 1978), Chapter 4 "Normal Procedures", 4.9 Preflight Check, Miscellaneous. Apparently, this was revised when Piper changed from the separate four tanks/four lines feed fuel selector, of the older models (four separate fuel tank gauges), to four tanks, tips flow into mains, mains feed fuel selector (two fuel tank gauges). The instructions are listed based on aircraft serial number and specifies the sequence for draining the tanks. The six second time is retained while the 11 second time is deleted and a note to the effect that a less than full tank my require an additional few seconds. Both these manuals contain drawings of the fuel systems. The Piper PA28-236 Information Manual (Issued July 1978) only mentions the right/left wing tank sumps. This manual also contains a fuel system drawing in Chapter 7, Description and Operations. |
#19
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I promised to supply chapter and verse on this drain-a-lotta-gas
stuff. The document is called: Airplane Flight Manual Model PA-28-235 Serial Number Effectivity: 28-10001 thru 28-7210023 The approval info says: FAA Approved 7/1/63 REVISED 9/1/71 Rev. No. 19 I do not know if there are futher revisions that extend the applicability. A note on the cover says: THIS DOCUMENT MUST BE KEPT IN AIRPLANE AT ALL TIMES REPORT VB-170 Here's what it says: (limitations, placards and autopilot stuff deleted) 10. Fuel System Pre-Flight Procedure The fuel system should be drained daily prior to first flight and after refueling to avoid the accumulation of water or sedient. Each fuel tank is equipped with an individual quick drain located at the lower inboard rear corner of the tank. The fuel strainer and quick drain valve are located in the fuselage at the lowest pointof the fuel system. It is important that the fuel system be drained in the following manner: a. Drain each tank through the individual quick drain located at the inboard rear corner of the tank making sure that enough fuel has been drained to insure that all water and sediment is removed. b. Place a container under the fuel sump drain outlet, which is locted under the fuselage. c. Drain the fuel strainer by pressing down on ghe lever located on the right-hand side of the cabin below the forward edge of the rear seat. The fuel selector must be positioned in the following sequence: off position, left tip, left main, right main, and right tip while draining the strainer to insure that the fuel lines between each tank outlet and fuel strainer are drained as well as the strainer. When the fuel tanks are full, it will take approximately 11 seconds to drain all the fuel in one of the lines between a tip tank and the fuel strainer and approximately six seconds to drain all the fuel in one of the lines from a main tank to the fuel strainer. When the fuel tanks are less than full, it will take a few seconds longer. d. Examine the contents of the container placed under the fuel sump drain outlet for water and sediment and dispose of the contents. (performance data snipped) Don |
#20
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When the fuel tanks are full, it will take approximately 11 seconds to
drain all the fuel in one of the lines between a tip tank and the fuel strainer and approximately six seconds to drain all the fuel in one of the lines from a main tank to the fuel strainer. When the fuel tanks are less than full, it will take a few seconds longer. My God, Don, do you really *do* this? I don't know the fuel flow out of those quick drains, but they are advocating holding them open for AT LEAST 34 seconds -- not counting the individual wing sumps. Figure another second or two for four wing tanks, and we're up to 42 seconds of draining gas, either on the ground or into a -- what? You'd need a friggin' pan, or bucket! Before each flight? And then what would you do with it all? This sounds like a rule that was written by the insurance guys. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" "Don Tuite" wrote in message ... I promised to supply chapter and verse on this drain-a-lotta-gas stuff. The document is called: Airplane Flight Manual Model PA-28-235 Serial Number Effectivity: 28-10001 thru 28-7210023 The approval info says: FAA Approved 7/1/63 REVISED 9/1/71 Rev. No. 19 I do not know if there are futher revisions that extend the applicability. A note on the cover says: THIS DOCUMENT MUST BE KEPT IN AIRPLANE AT ALL TIMES REPORT VB-170 Here's what it says: (limitations, placards and autopilot stuff deleted) 10. Fuel System Pre-Flight Procedure The fuel system should be drained daily prior to first flight and after refueling to avoid the accumulation of water or sedient. Each fuel tank is equipped with an individual quick drain located at the lower inboard rear corner of the tank. The fuel strainer and quick drain valve are located in the fuselage at the lowest pointof the fuel system. It is important that the fuel system be drained in the following manner: a. Drain each tank through the individual quick drain located at the inboard rear corner of the tank making sure that enough fuel has been drained to insure that all water and sediment is removed. b. Place a container under the fuel sump drain outlet, which is locted under the fuselage. c. Drain the fuel strainer by pressing down on ghe lever located on the right-hand side of the cabin below the forward edge of the rear seat. The fuel selector must be positioned in the following sequence: off position, left tip, left main, right main, and right tip while draining the strainer to insure that the fuel lines between each tank d. Examine the contents of the container placed under the fuel sump drain outlet for water and sediment and dispose of the contents. (performance data snipped) Don |
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