exactly what I want. (There are always doubts.) Gravity feed to a
carburetor. No high pressure fuel pumps, no recirculation pumps, no high
pressure fuel lines (bit of a safety issue), no pressure regulator, no
header tank, no return lines, no computers. Simple. I am going to set up a
test with a 5 gallon fuel can and fuel lines routed the same way they are in
the airplane from the tank to the carb and measure the pressure and then
decide whether to use a regular low pressure fuel pump or none at all. I'm
not going to mind a bit that there may be a slight performance loss with the
less efficient carb.
Mike Kimball
SR #044
-----Original Message-----
From: mike.davis@dcsol.com [mailto:mike.davis@dcsol.com]On Behalf Of
Rickhm at home
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2003 8:27 AM
To: murphy-rebel@dcsol.com
Subject: RE: V8 PSRU discussion
Ken,
Great feedback. I see your point. I'm not sure exactly how I will address
this, but your suggestion is a very viable option. I may put a pump on
each side before the header tank so the gas is constantly recirculating
between the main tanks and the header. I saw this as a recommendation. Bu
doing this the fuel in the header is constantly cycling with that in the
main. Any bubbles will hopefully be caught and sent back to the main tank.
These recirculation pumps are not high pressure pumps like that of the
fuel injection side, but more traditional pumps.... I still need t think
about this a bit. The part I am still pondering is failure analysis and
what if's.....
Thanks again!
RIck
SR70
-----Original Message-----
From: klehman@albedo.net [SMTP:klehman@albedo.net]
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2003 7:08 AM
To: murphy-rebel@dcsol.com
Subject: Re: V8 PSRU discussion
Yes there be bubbles !
I do know of one large (several gallon) unvented header tank
successfully flying in a high wing aircraft but even he has admitted
that he must be on the ground to reliably vent the tank manually and
restablish flow if he runs it dry.
Fuel is a mixture of compounds. When it is heated in the pump and fuel
rail all is fine as it is under increased pressure. However the more
volatile components will form vapour bubbles when the pressure drops
back to ambient across the fuel pressure regulator. With a large enough
and cool enough tank, most will recondense if they are returned to the
tank. High altitude, mogas, and warm fuel from lots of recirculation
won't help them recondense. With no fuel return, too many bubbles may
shorten the fuel pump life and has caused loss of prime as the pump
tries to suck vapour. So yes there can certainly be bubbles but most are
fuel vapour. In turbulence, there might be some entrapped air as well.
With a header tank vent, slugs of air from turbulence, side-slipping, or
low fuel also become a non issue as they can vent back to the cross tank
vent on my installation. I'd highly recommend that if a header tank is
used, it be vented. I think of a carbuerator float bowl as a header. It
separates vapour, provides a small fuel reservoir, and is vented one way
or another.
Ken
rickhm@mindspring.com wrote:
return line flows back into. Additionally, they recomended a circulationI read somewhere on the web that many use UN-vented Header tanks that the
pump between the header tank and the main tanks.
bubbles? Ken your comments suggest that this is the case. If true, II guess I have a fundemental question. Is the return fuel full of air
guess I find this surprising since the fuel is at 50-60 PSI as it hits the
jets.
Rick Muller
SR70
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