Howdy All,
In the July 06 Flyer, I believe it was Karl Hipp who wrote about his ferry flight to Sweden, where they had lower than normal fuel flow on one engine after takeoff.
I, too, am having low fuel flow probs on the left engine of my PA30, as well as associated other antagonations (I don't think that's a legal word) of having installed a salvaged left fuel selector valve that was badly corroded.
The article discussed pulling off what I assume was the main body Bendix RSA servo, and cleaning the air reference orifice.
Where the heck is that? I'm looking at the schematic on page 74d of the Comanche Service Manual, and I don't see it. I plan to go on the Internet and see if I can find it on any Bendix manufacturing site.
Plus, I've never read anywhere on this site about maintenance of the flow divider on top of the engine. If the flow divider diaphragm or valve is gunked up –– what can you do about it? Does it have to be sent out to be calibrated?
We seem to be getting the same amount of fuel through the nozzles, but I haven't measured carefully over a set period of time.
We have installed a newly overhauled fuel selector 1H7-1 2H from Webco, but the engine will barely run at full throttle. Obviously, we've got some gunk downstream of the earlier installed bad selector valve. Neither the engine-driven or aux electric fuel pump will deliver enough fuel to keep the engine running anywhere near normal.
The engine's only got about 150 hours on it, so the engine-driven pump is practically new. The aux pump is old, however (and probably needs to be checked for proper psi output [I think it's around 28]).
We found some crud in the fuel inlet fuel strainer screen in the main Bendix body, which we cleaned out. We blew out with compressed air all the nozzle lines from the flow divider.
I've read on this site that there could be air in the system that neither pump maybe cannot purge. Any ideas on how to ensure there is no air restricting the proper flow of fuel downstream of the selector valve into the engine?
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks