by vigilant104 » Sun Oct 07, 2018 1:26 am
Arnieb,
- Did the builder of the plane have any useful information?
- As your plane has an Aerocarb (as mine does), have done research on "the burps?" If your engine is experiencing these problems primarily when it is hot under the cowl (e.g. when you are running on the ground without much airflow), you may have "the burps." They are caused when fuel vaporizes and forms bubbles in the fuel line. When these bubbles reach the Aerocrb,, the result in a short period when no fuel is dripping through the tapered pin. The same bubbles might form in a plane with a regular float bowl crb, but they would be unnoticed in that case due to the relatively large volume of fuel in those carbs. Normally, the burps result in short periods of stumbling, but the engine does keep running.
The problem can be addressed in several ways. Insulating the fuel lines helps a lot. Also, many people eliminate the gascolator, which gives the fuel less time to get hot under the cowl. Some people have fitted a small return/vent line to allow the bubbles to escape before entering the Aerocarb. Running 100LL rather than gasoline helps, and any ethanol in any fuel will add to the problem.
I'd suggest you do some searches here and read up on the issue, it used to be a common one before it was identified and addressed. At the very worst, you could look for another carb, but many folks have successfully gotten their Aerocarb to work reliably. It's no reason to throw in the towel, there are lots of folks here to help.
Mark Waldron
Sonex 1230 (Builder: Jay Gibbs)
Aerovee, Trigear