1. The AeroInjector will not work properly with pressurized or ram air. As air pressure builds up the AeroInjector leans out erratically. Is the intake on the bottom of your cowling pressurizing the air to the AeroInjector?
lutorm wrote: Do people not observe big mixture changes depending on how full the tank is?
lutorm wrote:1. The AeroInjector will not work properly with pressurized or ram air. As air pressure builds up the AeroInjector leans out erratically. Is the intake on the bottom of your cowling pressurizing the air to the AeroInjector?
builderflyer wrote:It seems counterintuitive that reducing the pressure on the fuel in the tank is a good thing, especially in that the fuel pressure is so low to begin with and is even that much lower with lesser amounts of fuel in the tank. With your setup, It would seem possible to develop a negative fuel pressure in the fuel line with low quantities of fuel. What am I missing?
lutorm wrote:By routing the fuel vent to the intake, the two ends of the fuel system will always be at the same pressure regardless of your speed, so there should be no mixture changes as the ram air pressure changes which I would expect you to get otherwise.
SonexN76ET wrote:In Tony Bingelis's books he calls for orienting the fuel vent into the direction of flight to help to increase the fuel pressure in a gravity fed fuel tank.
SonexN76ET wrote:Based on the extremely small opening of the fuel vent line I doubt that it causes any major increase in fuel pressure. I think for the operation of the AeroInjector it is insignificant.
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