Charlie,
I would caution about your using a selector ‘normally’ and returning to
only one tank. I believe that it puts too much workload on the pilot, especially
when you don’t have max fuel. I don’t know about RV’s, but my experimental
(KIS) shows a definite development of the tendency to turn towards the heavy
tank when they get very far out of balance due to uneven fuel content. At about
5 gallons difference in the tanks, I start to have to apply steady pressure to
the ailerons to correct it. So, if you are getting low down to half tanks, and
start drawing from the non-return tank, it might not take very long to deplete
that tank with the excess fuel being dumped into the return tank. Our pumps move
the fuel rather fast, faster (I believe) than the certified planes that use that
system. A prototype Pulsar with the system as you described had this
problem during an early test flight when he started with ~10 gallons in each
tank, switched to the non-return tank, and ran out of gas much faster than
expected, couldn’t get the pump to prime in time from the other tank, and had an
off field landing.
Andair makes a nice duplex valve that returns the fuel to the tank it came
from. Costs a lot less than an off field landing.
FWIW
Bill
Schertz
KIS Cruiser #4045
N343BS
Phase one testing Completed
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 5:18 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Fwd: Fuel injector pump
cooling??
Ouch;
I hadn't thought about that. But I suspect that even a low pressure pump would
damage the tank if the vent is blocked. Thanks for the data point on the fact
that a high pressure pump can be used effectively as a transfer
pump.
Were you using a separate port on the main tank for your transfer
point? My tentative plan is to T into either the regulator return, or (assuming
an effective back/anti-siphon setup), into the main supply between tank &
engine pump. Obviously, the anti-siphon feature would need to be bullet proof to
tap the supply line.
One option I've considered is to use the fuel
selector 'normally', but have all regulator bypass return to a single 'main'
tank. This arrangement is actually used in some certified planes with injected
Continentals, but I'm leery of having my primary engine pump run dry for even a
very short interval as I empty an aux tank. I suppose that with that
arrangement, it would only run dry for a couple of seconds ( :-> ), so maybe
it would work out fine. Any thoughts?
Charlie
On
2/24/2011 2:36 PM, Steven W. Boese wrote:
Charlie,
I initially had my RV
set up with a Facet transfer pump with an external check valve. The
check valve spring was replaced with a slightly stronger one so that it served
both the anti back flow and anti siphon functions. The high percentage
of the time that the Facet transfer pump was operating convinced me to change
to the type (not the exact part) of pump you are considering. The
pump seemed reliable but after a couple of instances of transferring fuel out
the receiving tank’s vent in spite of a timer on the transfer pump, I
eliminated the transfer function altogether. The possibility of applying
up to 90 psi to the receiving tank if its vent malfunctioned did not suit
me. It would not take anywhere near this pressure to fail the
tank. The procedure for leak testing the fuel tanks cautions not to
apply even a couple of psi to them. The limitation here really was me,
though, not the equipment.
Steve
Boese
RV6A 1986 13B NA RD1A
EC2
From:
Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]
On Behalf Of Charlie England
Sent: Thursday, February 24,
2011 12:23 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject:
[FlyRotary] Fwd: Fuel injector pump
cooling??
Anyone see any
issues with one of the automotive in-tank pumps being used outside the tank?
Looking at the overall pump/pickup/regulator/level sensor/etc assemblies in
most auto fuel tanks, it would appear that the pump itself would be above the
level of the fuel anyway if the tank is less than 1/4 full.
I've been
looking for a Facet transfer pump that has both a backflow valve & an
anti-siphon valve (40257 is one) but they are very hard to find &
expensive when you find them. During my search, I ran across
this:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000BMBSS0/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_sr_3?pf_rd_p=486539851&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=B002YP4Q3Q&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=1JFK34G48EBF5R93EB2Y
The
application appears to be 87-98 GM products.
It appears to be very
similar to the 'standard' in-line pump that Tracy supplies, with the exception
of plastic components in the output end. Assuming that it's a positive
displacement gear pump, it should supply both the backflow & anti-siphon
features I desire & at roughly $30 shipped, it's cheaper than even the
cheapest Facet 'solid state' transfer pumps. I'm hoping that cooling/lube
won't be an issue as long as it isn't run 'dry' for more than a few seconds at
the end of a transfer
cycle.
Charlie