Rynoth wrote: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.
This doesn't seem to be an accurate statement. The fuel vent is ram air into the top of the tank. The fuel line ends at the needle in the aeroinjector, which is effectively a venturi. It seems to me that it would have an inverse effect to what you're describing.... an increase in airspeed would increase the pressure at the top of the tank and reduce it at the venturi.
Furthermore, the surface area of the aeroinjector inlet is far larger than the fuel vent. I think the fuel dynamics of this is much more complicated than meets the eye, and going with the Sonex recommendation is the prudent course (i.e. no ram air to aeroinjector.)
SonexN76ET wrote:In regards to the ArroInjector running rich while pulling G’s, I have noticed while pulling extended G’s (maybe three or four) for more than a few seconds the engine will surge or miss a bit. It does not seem to loose power it just makes a different engine sound than the normal rhythm. I have found that more aggressively leaning my mixture before I start the high G maneuvers reduces this disruption in the engine sound.
Jake
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