by skipsouthernsky » Sat Jun 11, 2011 7:11 pm
To all,
Although many (maybe all) single Comanches have fuel pressure guages, my understanding is that most of the twins only have a fuel flow guage with no fuel pressure guage. I personally think that is a shortcoming. On my other plane, (not a Comanche, but lycoming powered with Bendix fuel injection) I have fuel flow via JPI and fuel pressure via factory installed guages. I have found that operationally, especially in warm environments, upon level off at 7000 to 12,000 or higher, the fuel pressure will bobble quite a bit with a related fluctuation in fuel flow. Normally I believe this to be due to entrapped air in the lines (maybe there since previous hot shutdown) or possible fuel vaporization. This seems to be a normal occurance. 5 to 10 seconds of fuel boost pump (pumps working normally) will normally stabilize the situation and things will settle down and then pumps can be turned off. Sometimes this happens every 10 to 15 minutes for the first hour of flight and then dissappears. Hardly ever happens at lower altitudes. I think you could learn a lot about whats going on with your engines and fuel flow if you had fuel pressure guages. I have seen other scenarios of engine complaints, that IMHO could be much better diagnosed if a fuel pressure guage were present.
It might be problematic and troublesome to do, but I heartily recommend trying to get fuel pressure information into the cockpit
Sincerely,
Skip Dykema
Skip Dykema, ICS #3062
Comanche 180, Commercial-Instrument, SEL, MEL, A&P