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James wrote: 
>So why did you infer the fuel pump is not bad?



James,

It does seem like you have a multiple-things-wrong situation.

The fact that the fuel siphons out of the wing tanks, emptying them and
allowing you to run low on the fuselage tank implies nothing about the fuel
pump failing.

If you blow all the gas out of the wing tanks you'd get the same symptoms
with a perfect fuel pump.

Lynn Nelson who responded to you is an A&P and Coupe owner.  He works on
Coupes a lot, too.

Beware of fuel pumps.  The arm that goes in to the cam (?) is different on
some different engines.  A fuel pump from the C-75/85 will not work on a
C-90 for example.  The arms are different.  I don't know about the O-200.
Damage could result, from what I've heard.  My knowledge level on this is
hearsay.  Listen to experts and ask about my concerns to check if I was
right to worry about something.

Ed Burkhead
http://edburkhead.com 
ed -at- edburkhead???.com         (change -at- to @ and remove "???")

-----Original Message-----
From: jlsNS [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, October 23, 2005 3:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: RE: [COUPERS-TECH] Cross-Country Glitches


> 
> From: "Ed Burkhead" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: 2005/10/23 Sun PM 03:27:12 EDT
> To: "'jlsNS'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 
>       "Ctech" <[email protected]>
> Subject: RE: [COUPERS-TECH] Cross-Country Glitches
> 
> 
> James,
> 
> Yep, I have felt that jolt of fear from a dropped nose tank wire.  It's
> worth adding that into your second tier of instrument scans - the ones you
> do every 2-5 minutes.
> 
> The smart guys will give you good information on debugging this but I've
got
> a question:  Why do you think you need a new fuel pump?  From your
> description I don't see any fuel pump problems.

Imho, it sure died.   Another mechanic and I tried to prime it, to get it to
work.    It wouldn't--- mixture set full lean, mags off, starter twirling
the prop --- no fuel a-pumping.   We trouble-shot it in every way you would
try it and it wouldn't pump fuel.   And yes, we assured the lines were clear
and they were.   The wing tanks still had plenty of fuel.  We removed the
nosebowl and took the top off the pump for testing.  The pump's diaphram
moved up and down with the prop turning, showing that the cam was doing its
duty by wobbling the arm.   We figured the check-valves were stuck.  What do
you figure?

So why did you infer the fuel pump is not bad?  And now from what I've been
reading by googling all over the place (except in ercoupers.com because it's
apparently 404 today),  we're beginning to suspect that the reason for the
gas pouring out around the filler lid during climbout is attributed to a bad
flow restrictor in the pump.    The owner says the aircraft at one time did
not spill fuel in flight.   

Thanks for the e-mail.
> 
> Ed Burkhead
> http://edburkhead.com 
> ed -at- edburkhead???.com         (change -at- to @ and remove "???")
> 
>  




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