Dave.

 

Do you close the header tank valve after flight?

 

I always do. I don't trust the needle valve in the carburetor to hold the 
pressure. 

It happened at times that I forgot to close the valve and I lost all fuel from 
the header tank occasionally over the course of a week.

 

Hartmut
 


To: [email protected]; [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Date: Mon, 15 Jun 2009 11:10:55 -0500
Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Header Tank Slowly Drains









Huh!  My header tank always goes down, and the previous owner explained that 
the tanks were merely leveling.  So this was wrong?  Now, what should I do, 
first.?

Dave
 

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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of John Cooper
Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 10:17 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Header Tank Slowly Drains
 








Folk:
 
Assuming nothing in the tank itself is broken or misconnected, it is *not* 
possible for fuel to leak back into the wings through either the overflow or 
the pump.  The overflow line is what sets the fuel level in the header.  When 
fuel reaches the correct level the overflow line is no longer “under water” and 
fuel stops flowing back to the wings.  The fill pipe is *higher* in the tank 
than the over flow line, so fuel can *never* under any circumstances flow back 
through that line as it is never below the level of the fuel in the tank.
 
What can go wrong?  First, I’ve seen the two lines switched, so the fuel level 
is higher than it should be and the inlet is below the fuel level in the tank.  
Usually this results in a complaint of fuel on the windscreen. If the pump 
check valves leak then fuel could go back to the wings, but should stop when 
the fuel reaches the level of the fitting, which is where it should be 
normally, anyhow.  This situation should be corrected as in an emergency it 
would not be possible to stop that extra fuel in the tank from dumping into the 
engine compartment should one of the lines on the pump fail. 
 
The other problem is a crack in one of the lines or fittings (depending on 
vintage) that allows fuel into either the overflow or the fill line at a level 
below the intended level. One way this can happen is if someone is careless 
with a fill nozzle when filling the header tank manually.
 

John Cooper
Skyport Services
www.skyportservices.net












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