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#121
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In message , "Gord
writes (B2431) wrote: From: "Tarver Engineering" j All fuel is bought as weight, that is how an aircraft works. The fact that you pay for volume is a book keeper's issue. I have never seen anyone buy avgas by weight for small GA aircraft like the Cessna 172. Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired And I'll back Dan up for the Military (Canadian Mil at least) It's never bought fuel by the pound either (and I bought a lot too, pretty well all over the world, it was always ordered and billed in either Imperial Gallons or US Gallons) Civilian light aviation in the UK buys fuel by volume, not weight. You pay for the volume pumped, not the weight change: it's up to you to keep track of the weight. (Our aircraft could go over MGTOW with a full tank and two burly occupants: luckily I and my instructor were both wiry types) -- When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite. W S Churchill Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
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#122
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On Sun, 26 Oct 2003 18:20:16 +0000, "Paul J. Adam"
wrote: Civilian light aviation in the UK buys fuel by volume, not weight. You pay for the volume pumped, not the weight change: it's up to you to keep track of the weight. (Our aircraft could go over MGTOW with a full tank and two burly occupants: luckily I and my instructor were both wiry types) And if you're doing flight research or test, you have to call over and get the fuel temperature so you can do the conversion to pounds and compute cg position. So far as I know, all jets and turboprops fill in gallons and work in pounds. Of course, the weight is just a straight calibration thing and approximate, unless the fuel temperature is used to determine density (which it isn't, that I know of). The SR-71 was filled on the ground in gallons, but flown in pounds, mostly for flight limits. The boundaries of the various regions are a little peculiar because of how the fuel tanks sequenced, mostly to minimize cg extremes, but this is pretty common for any airplane with multiple fuel tanks. Needless to say (but I'll say it anyway), the reason this works this way is because volume is easy to measure, particularly for free-flowing liquids. Weight is harder. Naturally, the world prefers the easy way. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
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#123
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Mary Shafer wrote:
snip Needless to say (but I'll say it anyway), the reason this works this way is because volume is easy to measure, particularly for free-flowing liquids. Weight is harder. Naturally, the world prefers the easy way. Shafer's Corollary to Ockham's Razor? ;^) -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
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#124
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Mary Shafer writes:
Civilian light aviation in the UK buys fuel by volume, not weight. You pay for the volume pumped, not the weight change: it's up to you to keep track of the weight. (Our aircraft could go over MGTOW with a full tank and two burly occupants: luckily I and my instructor were both wiry types) And if you're doing flight research or test, you have to call over and get the fuel temperature so you can do the conversion to pounds and compute cg position. So far as I know, all jets and turboprops fill in gallons and work in pounds. Of course, the weight is just a straight calibration thing and approximate, unless the fuel temperature is used to determine density (which it isn't, that I know of). When I worked on a pipeline that send 500k gallons a day of JetA to the airport, and then pumped it to the ramp, it worked thus: We pumped/sold it by the barrel -- a barrel being 42 gallons. (That's an API standard for "custody transfer"...) The hydrant trucks, with a "in" hose, meter, filter, "out" hose and a platform to reach the wings, metered it in gallons. The ticket printer on it read in gallons. That went to the crew. I'll assume the cockpit all read in pounds, but don't know that from personal knowledge. But didja know some 737's have fuel gages under the wing, by the fuel point? There are also switches to control cross-feeding of the incoming fuel. -- 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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#125
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#126
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David Lesher wrote:
I'll assume the cockpit all read in pounds, but don't know that from personal knowledge. Any that I flew did except Lancasters which read in gallons. But didja know some 737's have fuel gages under the wing, by the fuel point? There are also switches to control cross-feeding of the incoming fuel. Almost (if not all) larger passenger a/c have this 'pressure refueling panel' (usually in a wheel-well) with electrical switches to control the direction and amount of fuel being uploaded. Fuel is almost always loaded using gallons and the internal fuel quantity indicators almost always indicate in pounds. Fuel weight is a much more useful parameter than volume where a/c are concerned. -- -Gord. |
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#127
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On C-130s we had the SPR (single point refuling panel) where they hooked up the
nozzel. It had indicators reading pounds for each of the integral tanks. Just an observation. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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#128
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/s...es/3081612.stm
"The court heard he had miscalculated the conversion from US gallons to litres when requesting fuel before taking off and asked for 90 litres instead of 113.5 litres." Official accident report at: http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/group...ty_502314.hcsp |
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#130
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"av8r" wrote in message ... Hi You all might want to read the story below about the Gimli Glider. http://www.flightsafety.org.au/articles/t0357.php Here's an extract from the above. Cheers...Chris The flight from Montreal to Edmonton, including a brief stop in Ottawa, required 22,300kg of fuel, an amount expressed as mass because of the importance of knowing an aircraft's weight. The mechanics needed to work out how many litres made up 22,300kg. They could then subtract the 7,682 litres already in the tanks, and use the fuel gauge on the refueling truck to tell when they had reached the right number of litres to make up 22,300kg. But the 767 was the first aircraft in Air Canada's fleet to use metric units (kilograms) rather than imperial (pounds). Metric units were being phased in across Canada, and the conversions were still causing confusion. And so, making a PC change, caused another near disaster. |
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