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#1
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I am building an air scoop to direct ram air to my fuel tank vents. The
vents (2) exit the bottom of the fuselage at 90° to the airstream. The scoop will fit over the top of the vents and is shaped like ¼ of a football. It is in the propeller arc. The inlet area of the scoop is .84 in². There will be three 3/8" OD aluminum tubes inside the scoop through which the air will flow. Two of them are the vents for the front and rear tanks, while the third is the drain tube for the rear tank fill. (There is a fuel door on the top of the fuselage for the rear tank. The tube is intended to drain any liquid such as rainwater or fuel overflow from the area inside the door.) Any air entering the third tube will exit around the fuel door with only the friction loss from the tube to restrict flow. Am I wasting my time, or will there be enough ram air pressure to actually assist fuel flow in the event of multiple fuel pump failure or vapor lock? I suppose I could put a check valve in that third tube so air couldn't flow. Rich S. |
#2
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In article ,
"Rich S." wrote: I am building an air scoop to direct ram air to my fuel tank vents. The vents (2) exit the bottom of the fuselage at 90° to the airstream. The scoop will fit over the top of the vents and is shaped like ¼ of a football. It is in the propeller arc. The inlet area of the scoop is .84 in². There will be three 3/8" OD aluminum tubes inside the scoop through which the air will flow. Two of them are the vents for the front and rear tanks, while the third is the drain tube for the rear tank fill. (There is a fuel door on the top of the fuselage for the rear tank. The tube is intended to drain any liquid such as rainwater or fuel overflow from the area inside the door.) Any air entering the third tube will exit around the fuel door with only the friction loss from the tube to restrict flow. Am I wasting my time, or will there be enough ram air pressure to actually assist fuel flow in the event of multiple fuel pump failure or vapor lock? I suppose I could put a check valve in that third tube so air couldn't flow. Rich S. It depends on how fast you are going. At 200 Kt,you may get about 2" or so of ram air pressure, which translate to about 1 PSI. |
#3
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"Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message
news ![]() It depends on how fast you are going. At 200 Kt,you may get about 2" or so of ram air pressure, which translate to about 1 PSI. I would probably need it most at best glide speed - you know, when there's that eerie silence up front. Say 80 mph or so. Rich (knots are for boats) S. |
#4
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On Mon, 10 Nov 2003 10:57:00 -0800, Rich S. wrote:
"Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() It depends on how fast you are going. At 200 Kt,you may get about 2" or so of ram air pressure, which translate to about 1 PSI. I would probably need it most at best glide speed - you know, when there's that eerie silence up front. Say 80 mph or so. Rich (knots are for boats) S. The ram air pressure at 80 mph would be worth about 1/4 inch of HG, or about 1/8 psi. It doesn't seem worth the trouble to me. -- Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit) Ottawa, Canada http://go.phpwebhosting.com/~khorton/rv8/ e-mail: khorton02(_at_)rogers(_dot_)com |
#5
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"Rich S." wrote in message ...
"Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() It depends on how fast you are going. At 200 Kt,you may get about 2" or so of ram air pressure, which translate to about 1 PSI. I would probably need it most at best glide speed - you know, when there's that eerie silence up front. Say 80 mph or so. Rich (knots are for boats) S. Fuel tank venting can be tricky. If you have two tanks, and there is a "both" position on the fuel selector valve, any difference in vent pressure will cause one tank to flow faster than the other. If the difference is large enough, it could actually prevent fuel from flowing from the lower-pressure tank. This arrangement has caused accidents in homebuilts in the past, and it's the reason that certified airplanes having interconnected tanks (the "both" position) must also, by law, have interconnected tank venting to keep vent pressures equal. Ram pressure won't be worth the effort, if you're counting on pressure to make up for failed pumps. The fuel pressure, and therefore flow, would be very inadequate and the engine would quit anyway. The area of the scoop will have no effect on ram pressure. Install a generic automotive electric fuel pump. Not expensive. Dan |
#6
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"Dan Thomas" wrote in message
om... Fuel tank venting can be tricky. If you have two tanks, and there is a "both" position on the fuel selector valve, any difference in vent pressure will cause one tank to flow faster than the other. If the difference is large enough, it could actually prevent fuel from flowing from the lower-pressure tank. This arrangement has caused accidents in homebuilts in the past, and it's the reason that certified airplanes having interconnected tanks (the "both" position) must also, by law, have interconnected tank venting to keep vent pressures equal. Ram pressure won't be worth the effort, if you're counting on pressure to make up for failed pumps. The fuel pressure, and therefore flow, would be very inadequate and the engine would quit anyway. The area of the scoop will have no effect on ram pressure. Install a generic automotive electric fuel pump. Not expensive. Dan.......... Got a Bendix on the firewall and a mechanical on the Lycoming. The tanks are either/or - not both. I need to move the Bendix to a cool location, but haven't yet. That is a *bunch* of work and I haven't been up to the project. The scoop, though is a small matter and easy to do. I think the area of the scoop does make a difference in ram pressure due to the "escape" line that runs up to the fuel fill enclosure. How much, I don't have a clue. When you say, "by law" I assume you are speaking about production aircraft. Regards, Rich S. |
#8
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![]() "Rich S." wrote in message ... \ When you say, "by law" I assume you are speaking about production aircraft. Yes, it's a part 23 requirement that says that tanks with interconnected outlets must have interconnected venting. |
#9
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![]() "Roger Halstead" wrote in message ... This arrangement has caused accidents in homebuilts in the past, and it's the reason that certified airplanes having interconnected tanks (the "both" position) must also, by law, have interconnected tank venting to keep vent pressures equal. I think you will find even certified planes like Bonanzas have an either, but not both. So? That has nothing to do with the venting. The problem is that if you can't gravity feed to a common point, then you are in deep dodo if you try to pump and one tank is full of air. High wings generally have no problem gravity feeding (and frequently have a both position, and in sometimes only a both position). Low wings generally don't have a BOTH, although my Navion for example drains both wing tanks to a common low point and pumps from there. The (stock) Navion fuel valve is OFF-ON. The Cessnas with a BOTH position have a bent line that runs between the two tanks just behind the pilot's head. This line is actually the source of some interesting fuel flows that cause the Cessna tanks to drain unevenly when filled above the vent line. Likewise the Navion fuel vent line runs between the two tanks (forward of the pilot). |
#10
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Roger Halstead wrote in message . ..
On 10 Nov 2003 17:04:49 -0800, (Dan Thomas) wrote: Fuel tank venting can be tricky. If you have two tanks, and there is a "both" position on the fuel selector valve, any difference in vent pressure will cause one tank to flow faster than the other. If the difference is large enough, it could actually prevent fuel from flowing from the lower-pressure tank. This arrangement has caused accidents in homebuilts in the past, and it's the reason that certified airplanes having interconnected tanks (the "both" position) must also, by law, have interconnected tank venting to keep vent pressures equal. I think you will find even certified planes like Bonanzas have an either, but not both. As I recall the Cherokee was the same way, but didn't have aux tanks. Ram pressure won't be worth the effort, if you're counting on It probably wouldn't be enough to push the gas half the height of the tank unless you were really moving. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) pressure to make up for failed pumps. The fuel pressure, and therefore flow, would be very inadequate and the engine would quit anyway. The area of the scoop will have no effect on ram pressure. Install a generic automotive electric fuel pump. Not expensive. Dan High-wing airplanes typically have a "both" position and often rely on gravity flow. Low-wingers can't, as running one tank dry could result in the pump being quite happy sucking air instead of fuel. We finished a Glastar (high-wing) that had only an on-off valve and two wing tanks. The tank plumbing was teed together just upstream of the valve. The tanks had separate vents, and one had a bit more pressure than the other. That tank would drain first, but we didn't fly it long enough to see if there was enough pressure to prevent the full tank's fuel from flowing. We modified the vent system to generate similar pressures, but it still needs to have the tank vent systems plumbed together. My quick calculations give me a static head pressure for gasoline of about 0.32 psi per foot, so a 1 psi vent pressure could lift the fuel three feet, more than the typical high-wing tank-to-carb distance on a gravity feed system. There is a real danger here, I think, though the difference in vent pressures would have to be pretty serious. A plugged vent on one side would do it. Cessna has their tanks vented from a single underwing vent behind the left strut. This line goes into the top of the left tank, and another line runs from the inboard top end of that tank across the cabin roof to the top of the right tank. In addition, the fuel caps have vents with one-way check valves to allow air in (but not fuel out) in case of vent icing. Dan |
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