Fred,
Thanks -- that makes sense. We tend not to think of freezing much in Oz
(particularly at this time of year: 30C/86F in Adelaide yesterday)
Best regards,
Nick
-----Original Message-----
Subject: Re: Fuel routings
Nick Hammond wrote:
> ...
> It also allows the gascolator to be at the
> lowest point of the system which a number of people who have contributed
to
> the fuel system debate have mentioned as important. Personally, I don't
> follow their logic: if all of the fuel going to the engine passes through
> the gascolator, it will be able to perform its function of separating
water
> and foreign matter no matter at what height it is mounted.
That advice is fairly universal, and I think there's several reasons.
One would be that water can collect in a low-point bend in the line
upstream of the gascolator and freeze, restricting flow. Another is
where you have no tank drain, and need to remove all contaminated
fuel, a gascolator not at lowest point will not do so. Still, our FAA
has an Advisory Circular (AC 20-43C) describing tests proving a
gascolator is ineffective in removing all of a measured amount of
water added to the fuel, so hence the need for tank drains also.
Regards,
Fred F.
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