MichaelFarley56 wrote:Does anyone else have any stories or questions?
kmacht wrote:I would like to get back to the fuel line / ethanol thing for a minute. For those of you who have had problems with the fuel line when running ethanol could you let the rest of us know what brand and/or part number you were using? The aerovee and aerocarb is supposed to be ethanol compliant so the only failure mode from using mogas would be the fuel line itself. If you are using the braided line that sonex recomends for the oil lines (JEGS P/N 799-632060) for your fuel line it is supposed to be ethanol compatable. If that is what is being used it leaves me wondering why people are having it swell up on them.
Keith
#554
1.2 hours
kmacht wrote:The cause with the highest number of incidents was a loss of engine power for unknown reasons. Those totaled 8 but only 3 were fatal. A number of them were for unknown reasons because the aircraft was destroyed but there were also a few where nothing was able to be found wrong during inspection of the engine.
kmacht wrote:What worries me the most is the engine failures for unknown reasons. Without knowing why the engines failed it is hard to come up with a solution to the problem if there even is one common problem.
rizzz wrote:Is it known how many of those 8 were flying with an AeroCarb/AeroInjector?
I know this is a controversial subject but it does need to be discussed. I don't have a Jab or AeroVee but I do have an AeroInjector so I for one would like to know.
Also, the percentage of "loss of power for unknown reasons", is that comparable to what you would see in aircraft powered by more conventional aircraft engines like the Lycomings and Continentals or even the Rotax powered planes? (In other words, are we flying behind powerplants that are more prone to fail due to unknown reasons?)
kmacht wrote:I would like to get back to the fuel line / ethanol thing for a minute. For those of you who have had problems with the fuel line when running ethanol could you let the rest of us know what brand and/or part number you were using? The aerovee and aerocarb is supposed to be ethanol compliant so the only failure mode from using mogas would be the fuel line itself. If you are using the braided line that sonex recomends for the oil lines (JEGS P/N 799-632060) for your fuel line it is supposed to be ethanol compatable. If that is what is being used it leaves me wondering why people are having it swell up on them.
Keith
#554
1.2 hours
SonexN76ET wrote:I think everyone here has some great ideas on safety.
I would like to add that we include key inspection items from experienced Sonex aircraft builders and pilots. What are key areas that should be inspected for wear? What are the wear limits? What items need to be replaced periodically? What items are prone to failure? We need to share each others experiences to make the fleet safer on an ongoing basis.
We also need to provide peer reviewed and validated tips and tricks (lessons learned) for building and for operating the Sonex aircraft. Too much on these forums turns out to be hearsay or simply one person's technique. If something works well for more than one builder and can be validated then that tip or trick or technique could be placed into our experience vault. If a tip or trick or technique turns out to be bogus, it should be deleted from that knowledge vault. A key example is Keith's question on how to handle fuel with ethanol, we need to have a solid answer for this. It should not be guess work.
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So perhaps the advice in the forums needs to be shifted through, organized, and peer reviewed then put into a knowledge vault that builders and pilots can go to with some level of confidence.
Safety needs to be a top concern of this foundation.
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