Great to hear you may be in the air soon.
 

Tony 

--- On Tue, 6/29/10, kim Blackseth <[email protected]> wrote:


From: kim Blackseth <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ercoupe-tech] Fwd: Gas Overflow and New Plane is Flying
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, June 29, 2010, 5:42 PM


  



Thanks!  That was it!


When the NTSB took apart my pump on my crashed plane, they left off the 
restrictor fitting.  I found one in my salvaged plane and I'm installing it 
now...


I should be a FLYING member of the group again by Saturday.  As most know, 
N2332H crashed on January 16th.  With tremendous moral, technical and in some 
cases financial support from this group, I bought the crashed/salvaged plane 
from the insurance company and a VERY used 415C.


Over the last six months we have built one very sound plane out of the two.  
The new plane has a new N number (N415TB) and should be a great aircraft. This 
new airframe is Light Sport.


We re-built a C-85 with a new 0-200 crank. It has new alternator, mags, light 
weight starter and virtually everything that is fire wall forward is new. It 
has metal wings, a split elevator and was extensively inspected for corrosion. 
We added newly re-built fuel tanks, fittings and lines. All new aileron and 
control fittings, etc are new.


We rebuilt the panel and re-did all the various stuff I needed for my 
disability.. .  I'm very excited to get flying again! 


All give further reports if anyone is interested.. .



Kim Blackseth, ICC, CASp
310 17th St
Oakland, CA
510-839-1760








On Jun 29, 2010, at 3:13 PM, iflysmo...@aol. com wrote:

  



Hey Kim: The first thing I would check is to make sure the fitting on the out 
line of the pump has a restrictor installed. This is the fitting (generally on 
the rear of the pump) which is highest on the pump body. It should have a 45 
degree fitting installed that has a restriction installed with a 1/16" hole 
drilled in it. This allows about 7 gallons per hour of fuel to be pumped from 
the wings to the header tank. If a fitting has been installed which does not 
have the restrictor, then too much fuel will be pumped into the header tank 
(more than the overflow line can handle).
Lynn Nelsen
 

In a message dated 6/29/2010 5:45:34 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, kimblackseth@ 
mac.com writes:
  






All... 


We test flew my newly re-built 415C today and all appeared well, but one detail 
and I'm looking for some advice... 


The header tank was overflowing, as it appears the pump was filling the header 
tank, but the overflow back to the wing tanks was not working...


What did I do wrong or what should I check??



Kim Blackseth, ICC, CASp
310 17th St
Oakland, CA
510-839-1760





















      

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