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#1
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"Maxwell" luv2^fly99@cox.^net wrote in
: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... OK, talked to my guy. He had several suggestions. One is to drain it all dry and then blow some air (carefully!) into the right tank and see if you can hear it coming across into the left tank by listening at the filler cap. Possible problems he came up with were a crushed or swollen fuel line downstream of where you tested previously, or, he thought more likely, incorrect placement of the little plastic fuel vent deflector and/or the location of the fuel vent itself. There are specs for the location of these if you look in the manuals. But for the fact that the fuel doesn't migrate when parked, I would have said this is definitely your problem For instance, Cessnas with bent or incorrectly positioned vents are chronically out of balance. Bertie Oh yeah, that's a lot of help. I know. Where did you find this wanna boi, Wikipedia? Said where i found it wannabe boi. Aren't we the little prankster! Bertie |
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On May 8, 7:39*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
another useful clue The deflector business is something nobody else has mentioned yet; I'll pass it on to the A&P. He's got a couple planes needing attention to their engines and the Citabria, being under-utilized and still flyable in the pattern, isn't a high priority, so resolving this may take until next week. I'll post what's been found after the whole system's been gone through thoroughly. Thanks. |
#3
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quietguy writes:
The deflector business is something nobody else has mentioned yet; I'll pass it on to the A&P. I can't see the deflector being it, considering it does not drain back while tied down... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
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On May 8, 8:18 pm, quietguy wrote:
The deflector business is something nobody else has mentioned yet; I'll pass it on to the A&P. He's got a couple planes needing attention to their engines and the Citabria, being under-utilized and still flyable in the pattern, isn't a high priority, so resolving this may take until next week. I'll post what's been found after the whole system's been gone through thoroughly. Thanks. The deflector does nothing more than keep bugs and ice out of the vent. Cessna places theirs behind the lift strut to do the same thing. When the airplane isn't in flight it makes no difference whatever, and older Champs and Citabrias didn't have it. I would still suspect rotten hoses, on both the fuel and vent lines. Especially if they're old or have been run on Mogas. Or if some mechanic installed the wrong MIL-Spec hose the last time they were replaced. It's the only thing short of a blocked aluminum fuel line that would do this, especially if it won't crossflow overnight to the lower wing or equalize between tanks if the airplane is level. It doesn't take much slope to make it run from one side to the other, BTW. Dan |
#6
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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... Yeah, gotta be, really. I have to say, i wouldn't consider the airplane airworthy in this state, though. Bertie Yeah buddy, like ANYONE would be stupid enough to give a rat's ass what you think. |
#7
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I use to own a 1968 7ECA. The fuel never drained equally. Sometimes,
one tank would not start to drain until the other was fairly low. Not only did I replace the cap gaskets, I replaced the fuel caps completely. It seemed to help a little. Do you have fuel gauges in each wing root? Mine only had a gauge on one side so you knew which side was flowing if the gauge was dropping faster or slower than it should. At cruise I burned 6 gallons an hour or hopefully 3 gallons per side but many times I'd fly for an hour and the gauge would never move or I'd fly for an hour and the gauge would indicate 1/2 (13 gallon tanks) instead of 3/4. I was thinking that you may not in fact have a problem but my tanks would tend to equalize overnight. There's a pretty active citabria group on yahoo that I used to participate in. I'd ask over there but it does sound like a soft fuel line. Dave 1960 M35 quietguy wrote: The A/C in question is a 1974 Bellanca 7ECA, re-engined with an O-320 so it's effectively a 7GCAA. It belongs to the Offutt AFB Aero Club and has seen very little use, often sitting for weeks at a time until a week ago when I began taking dual in it 2-3 times a week to get my tailwheel endorsement. The fuel system is not for inverted flight, so no header tank -- two 18-gallon wing tanks with check valves to a single vent on the left, crossflow pipes to the aft fuel manifold under the baggage compartment and crossflow pipes to the forward fuel manifold on the firewall. Caps are non-vented and the gaskets are like new. This A/C is drawing 3-4 times as much fuel from the left tank as from the right and it's not crossflowing on the ground, even overnight. We've made right patterns as well as lefts -- makes no difference. We haven't done any extended S&L flight, just 11 NM to Plattsmouth, NE for pattern work. The club's A&P has blown out the feed and vent lines and got a good blast into the right tank from both. We're getting a free flow of clean gas out of all four drains. So what's our next move? Anybody had this problem? |
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On Wed, 7 May 2008 11:17:24 -0700 (PDT), quietguy
wrote: The A/C in question is a 1974 Bellanca 7ECA, re-engined with an O-320 so it's effectively a 7GCAA. It belongs to the Offutt AFB Aero Club and has seen very little use, often sitting for weeks at a time until a week ago when I began taking dual in it 2-3 times a week to get my tailwheel endorsement. The fuel system is not for inverted flight, so no header tank -- two 18-gallon wing tanks with check valves to a single vent on the left, crossflow pipes to the aft fuel manifold under the baggage compartment and crossflow pipes to the forward fuel manifold on the firewall. Caps are non-vented and the gaskets are like new. This A/C is drawing 3-4 times as much fuel from the left tank as from the right and it's not crossflowing on the ground, even overnight. We've made right patterns as well as lefts -- makes no difference. We haven't done any extended S&L flight, just 11 NM to Plattsmouth, NE for pattern work. The club's A&P has blown out the feed and vent lines and got a good blast into the right tank from both. We're getting a free flow of clean gas out of all four drains. So what's our next move? Anybody had this problem? does the fuel situation change if you swap the caps to the other tank? |
#9
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Stealth Pilot wrote in
: On Wed, 7 May 2008 11:17:24 -0700 (PDT), quietguy wrote: The A/C in question is a 1974 Bellanca 7ECA, re-engined with an O-320 so it's effectively a 7GCAA. It belongs to the Offutt AFB Aero Club and has seen very little use, often sitting for weeks at a time until a week ago when I began taking dual in it 2-3 times a week to get my tailwheel endorsement. The fuel system is not for inverted flight, so no header tank -- two 18-gallon wing tanks with check valves to a single vent on the left, crossflow pipes to the aft fuel manifold under the baggage compartment and crossflow pipes to the forward fuel manifold on the firewall. Caps are non-vented and the gaskets are like new. This A/C is drawing 3-4 times as much fuel from the left tank as from the right and it's not crossflowing on the ground, even overnight. We've made right patterns as well as lefts -- makes no difference. We haven't done any extended S&L flight, just 11 NM to Plattsmouth, NE for pattern work. The club's A&P has blown out the feed and vent lines and got a good blast into the right tank from both. We're getting a free flow of clean gas out of all four drains. So what's our next move? Anybody had this problem? does the fuel situation change if you swap the caps to the other tank? Citabria caps aren't vented. Bertie |
#10
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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... Citabria caps aren't vented. Bertie No, but your head is wannaboi. |
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