Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #51258
From: Ed Anderson <eanderson@carolina.rr.com>
Subject: RE: [FlyRotary] fuel injection
Date: Wed, 19 May 2010 16:21:07 -0400
To: 'Rotary motors in aircraft' <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>

Hi John,

 

I believe Tracy is out in Colorado at this time, so don’t know if he is able to monitor the list from his mountain top cabin or not.  Personally, I would be hesitant to fly (particularly a first flight) with anything amiss -particularly like the engine flooding.  Yes, you may disarm the problem by pulling the circuit breakers to the injectors, but if you do not know what is actually causing the problem then you can not be absolutely certain that action will prevent it from occurring in flight.

 

Two things I can think of that might cause the injectors to hang open – either something is causing the EC2 to hold open the injectors OR an electrical short in the leads from the injectors to the EC2 is somehow getting grounded.  Either one could cause the injector to stay open.  Pulling the CB power to the injectors should prevent them from being opened either way – Provided there is no other way for the injectors to get power to them.  Depending on how the injector disable switches are wired to power and the circuit breakers – you might actually have two power sources (one unintended) to your injectors which could be causing the problem.

 

You might try connecting  a volt ohm meter on one of the primary injectors electrical connection and try turn on/off your CB to make certain it does remove the power to the injectors – also try flipping your injector disable switches on/off to check that they don’t somehow provide power when the CB is pulled.

 

 

 Play it safe, John.

 

Ed

 


From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of John
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 9:51 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] fuel injection

 

Tracy, this morning I got the Tailwind out for the first flight, started it up and every thing looked like a go, the wind has finally subsided.  Went to the house to tell my wife and went out to go.  On start up the engine was flooding bad, so I shut of the primary and secondary injector switches and the engine leaned out enough to stay running.  From past posts it is my understanding that the injectors are activated by the ground, is this correct.  This is the same way it acted last fall when I changed the injectors, some thing is causing them to stay open, apparently when things get up to temperature and it sits for a short period of time.  The wiring harness is one of Bob Whites and is wired according to his diagram, which I have checked several times.  I noticed that the mixture and program knobs do not function with the injectors switches off.

 

If I pull the fuse to the fuel injection system, can I fly on the Weber carb, it runs well with it.  If I can get the 40 hrs flown off, maybe I can get it down to Mason and have David check it out, as is beyond my capabilities.  JohnD

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