Hey guys,Let me see if I convey this with some sort of reasoning. First 
history: I started out with aerocarb set up with a fuel pump and a regulator 
and ram air on a corvair. The fuel tank is vented from the very very top of the 
tank and sloped down hill behind the panel and out the side of the fuselage 
just in front of the wing about 7" up from the top of the wing on the passenger 
side. It is comprised of a 1/4" alum tube inside the tank and to the outside of 
the tank, the vent is then 1/4 " clear tubing to the side of the fuselage and 
then changes back to 1/4" alum. tube. The tube through the side is bent in  
somewhat of an crooked S shape so that it points straight into the slip stream 
of the fuselage. The open end faceing front is flared with the flaring tool 
that would normally  be used to install the flared fittings for a AN-4 flared 
fitting. The fuel pump was removed in favor of gravity feed during first ground 
runs. The ram air was removed as problems showed up during taxi testing. The 
slight ram pressure that the vent tube picks up remains after 6 years and 660 
hours. There is a fuel pressure sensor installed low in the system that reads 
to the tenth's of a pound. It never, even with as low as 2 gallons of fuel 
remaining, reads less than .9# at static. And around 1.4# in flight. I since 
added the fuel flow and installed it upstream of the pressure sensor. The 
pressures dropped but not to what i had calculated them to be. The static with 
low fuel is never below .8# and in flight now operates at 1.2# . The head 
height for pressure is 19" sitting level and certainly less in any climb. I do 
not have any back flow preventer installed and my opinion is something 
mechanical in a line that small is something that will get stuck. I got lucky 
and the pressures are centered around the published required pressures for the 
Aerocarb.Steven, I don't remember you saying what engine or what size carb, or 
header tank. The Aerocarb does work and I can not explain some of the problems 
that people have. Given that statement if i had more money 10 years ago I would 
have installed a ellison. My experinces with auto fuel and the Aerocarb are not 
good either.Joe HortonCoopersburg, Pa.---------- Forwarded Message ----------
From: "John Martindale" <john_martind...@bigpond.com>
To: "KRnet" kr...@mylist.net 
Subject: KR> Fuel tank pick up and vent
List-Post: krnet@list.krnet.org
Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2011 19:07:39 +1100


I've had no experience with Aerocarbs. I suspect it might given they are
reputedly a calibrated "fuel leak" but I don't know. Guess it depends on the
diameter of the vent and thus the amount of pressurisation. Someone else
might chime in or you should contact the manufacturer for the definitive
opinion. A simple vent in a cap will leak if upside in a prang. Use an
aircraft designed one. I think these have some kind of a rubber flap
arrangement that prevents this. Check out Aircraft Spruce.

John

I will be running a areocarb on a corvair engine and was wondering
if running ram pressure into the vent of the header tank will cause a
problem with this carb.  Should I be using just a vented cap instead.


Steven Bedford
Kr2s builder   


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