Ken,
This
hose is between the rail and the regulator, so it's at rail pressure - 40
PSI.
John
John,
Just curious - why would the 'return' hose leak have a 'stream' of
gas? This sounds like the 'stream' was at least 12" long. If
the hose is of sufficient size there should be virtually no pressure even
though the volumn is high. Maybe this is a good chance to replace the
hose and fitting with something larger.
Ken Powell Bryant, Arkansas 501-847-4721 C150 /
RV-4
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Original message --------------
> > I thought about this some
more. Remember all your EC-2 problems? Heavy > > arching like this
on ground is just the sort of thing that kills off > > sensitive
electronics. > > > > I'd put a volt meter between that
hose, and a good aircraft ground, and > > watch it while cranking
the engine, just to be sure it doesn't > > still want to >
> be your engine ground. An ohm meter reading from the hose to ground
would > > work as well, but not as directly. > >
Yea. I've been thinking that too. We tested the ground to the engine and
> found it a little weak, but I don't think it was THAT weak. I'll be
checking > the ground path again later today. > > The
point for others is that it's surprisingly EZ to damage an >
"indestructible" hose with amps and get an intermittent leak that's hard to
> find and could REALLY spoil you're day. A LongEZ driver (friend of
Buly's) > from near here crashed & burned recently with an engine
fire (Rotax engine). > That's what made me extra extra cautious.
> > John > > > >> Homepage:
http://www.flyrotary.com/ > >> Archive:
http://lancaironline.net/lists/flyrotary/List.html
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