Thanks Bob and everyone who responded.
I’ll post what I find out for
everyone’s education.
Tim
From: Lancair Mailing List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Robert Pastusek
Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2010 7:00
AM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: [LML] Re: Pressurization
problem
Tim wrote:
Cabin won’t pressurize. Visitor shopping for a
4P was sitting in cabin with a battery charger on the battery supposedly
studying the cheltons but I suspect he was pushing every button and switch he
could. Now pressure valve won’t close. I can hear the dump
switch and gear handle switch both clicking in the valve but it doesn’t
move up or down. Removed the valve and checked for travel. I can
manually close it on the bench but it immediately opens again. With pressurized
air flowing in (vacume cleaner hooked up in reverse) I can depress the valve
with my fingers and almost get it to seal but it immediately opens. Is
there another safety switch in the pitot system somewhere? Any idea
where?
I’d appreciate any advice.
Thanks,
Tim, N524JG, LNC4P, Ser# 411
Tim,
Are you sure you
by-passed the gear-down switch? That’s the most likely cause of
“pressurization dump” when the gear is down. You can test
this by pulling the hydraulic pump circuit breaker; then [CAREFULLY and
COMPLETELY] bleeding down the hydraulic system with the flaps. (You can add a
safety factor by putting a length of 2x2 wood in the nose gear scissors.)
When the hydraulic pressure is zero, by-pass the gear down-lock solenoid and
raise the gear handle. Then test the system again. In my airplane
(depends on how the system is wired, but this is “standard”), the
switch that controls the down-lock also controls power to the pressure
controller. Could a wire have come off one side of this switch…it’s
behind the left side of the center vertical console, just below the gear
operating lever. Your report of “clicking” above would seem to have
already validated this part of the system, but worth checking twice…)
Sorry I don’t have another idea…
BE SURE TO GET THE
GEAR HANDLE BACK DOWN BEFORE RESTORING POWER TO THE HYDRAULIC SYSTEM.
Bob