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Check out the sensor at this web page.
http://www.aircraftextras.com/LowOilSensor.htm
It will work for water as well as oil. You will need a surge tank tied
into your primary circulation system for it to work. The sensor would
go in the bottom of the surge tank. Something similar to what is
described here:
http://www.stewartcomponents.com/tech_tips/Tech_Tips_2.htm
-----Original Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Dennis Haverlah
Sent: Thursday, April 12, 2007 8:34 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Coolant Level Probe - Will it work
I have an optical liquid level sensor in my air/coolant seperator/expansion tank. It worked OK in tests. After ground testing the engine for about one hour while auto-tuning and taxi testing, I drained some coolant out of the system to expose the coolant level sensor to make sure it still worked. It did not indicate low coolant! I removed the probe and found it had a scum deposit - when wiped clean it worked. My engine came out of a 2004 RX-8 and had 9400 miles on it.
My cooland is 60% distilled water and 40 % Prestone - yellow - antifreeze. I have not added any water-wetter but will check today on John Deer's product. The coolant is always slightly cloudy. The engine
had some antifreeze in it when I recieved it and I flushed the coolant system. I also changed the antifreeze after about 4 hours of ground operation. Is there any solution - additive to keep the system cleaner,
is there a better coolant level dector - or do I need to hire a scum cleaner to keep it clean?? I guess I could give up and just watch the coolant pressure for clues.
Thanks,
Dennis H.
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