I had sent out a note a week or so ago about a smell of fuel in the plane 
whenever I was throttled back and descending. Today I taxied out with intention 
of flying around a bit and experimenting with throttle settings, attitudes, 
etc., to get more empirical data. I never made it to the runway! The smell of 
fuel was overpowering. I taxied to the FBO and when I looked at the plane I 
could see streaks of oil/fuel down both sides of the cowl. The plane was clean 
when I left the hangar, so obviously fuel was washing oil off all sorts of 
parts and creating the streaks down the side. The mechanic stood in front of 
the plane as I cranked it over, and the fuel pump was squirting fuel out the 
front. The prop was then distributing the fuel all over the engine. 

I am assuming that in recent flights the leak was much less obvious, and the 
air flow through the cabin was altered enough during descent to let some of the 
smell of the leaking fuel get in. In normal flight, there was no smell. Today 
it appeared that some gas had leaked into the oil, but not much. The level did 
not appear higher, and the oil was still viscous, but I think it was a bit 
thinner. 

We will replace and pump and change the oil and all should be well. Of course, 
the pumps are insanely expensive. But then, it is an airplane.

Larry
N99340

Reply via email to