Richard.
 
I can understand your concern. 
 
Maybe it is good to know that I also have the bobber go only half way up the 
glass tube. It depends all on age and deterioration of the cork.
 
To check how much fuel you really got when indicating "full" or half full in 
your eyes, just - on the ground- disconnect the hose to the gascolator and 
redirect into a 5 Gallon can.
Then open the header tank fuel valve. 
You should at least be able to fill that canister. It is also a good way to 
measure and memorize the way the bobber looks when the gas tank is half full 
and empty.
 
Hartmut




To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Mon, 6 Oct 2008 
07:41:05 -0500Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Electric Fuel Pump




Rich responded directly to me and added information about his problem: > My 
real concern is whether my center tank is actually getting > enough fuel.  I 
wouldn't worry if I knew it was filling properly.  > I bought a new glass sight 
gauge for the center tank from > Skyport and an only registers 1/2 way up the 
sight glass.  > Saw a UTube video and that Coupe had the same gauge > and it 
was all the way to the top.  I might be missing something > of course, but 
that's my little fuel problem or gauge problem > at the moment.Rich,That could 
be a variation of the gauge, fuel pump problems, fuel flowlimiter mis-sizing or 
a fault with the overflow return system. Let's check.It is important for the 
experts to know what is your plane's original modeland serial number. This 
tells a lot about the original fuel systemconfiguration to the experts. There 
have been some differences how the fuelreturn was configured. Please include 
that in your next post to the forum.Checking the overflow return 
system:Over-fill the nose tank up to the top then set the plane on level ground 
andwait five minutes for the extra to drain out. (You don't want the wingtanks 
to be too full when you do this.)Then, use a dip stick and measure the EXACT 
distance from the top of thefiller ring to the fuel and let us know. Also, 
measure how high the top ofthe sight gauge is from the bottom of its travel and 
report that to theforum as well. Mark that sight gauge spot for later 
comparison when you areup flying – it often stays higher than that when you are 
flying.We've got a bunch of people who can tell if your fuel level is low.Fuel 
pump:It may be that your current engine-driven fuel pump is not pumping well 
andis about to fail. Was the disassembly and inspection really done at thelast 
annual inspection? If it wasn't done, maybe it should be done.Fuel flow 
restrictor:I can't, off the top of my head, remember the orifice size of the 
fuel flowrestrictor that should be in the output of the fuel pump. There's 
aspecific size that limits the fuel flow to what can be handled by theoverflow 
return system yet still deliver way more than the engine can use atfull power. 
Sometime today an expert will post a message with that orificesize.Main tank 
clogging:Have you checked inside the main fuel tanks for gunk around the 
outflowfittings? (This ought to also show when you drain fuel during 
preflight.)It's good to "vacuum" out the tanks with a pipe and hose - start a 
siphongoing and use the pipe/hose to vacuum up gunk from the bottom of the 
tanks.Fuel line clogged:I don't know how to best check this possibility. Watch 
for suggestions ifthe easier stuff above doesn't solve the problem.Ed 





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