NWade wrote:As others have mentioned: It is important that the Aeroinjector is the *lowest* point in the fuel system. From the photos you showed, it appears that your gascolator is lower than the Aeroinjector. That is going to cause lots of problems. First, any bubbles or vapor will get trapped in the system with that layout. Second, by forcing the fuel to run “uphill” after the gascolator you may see dramatic losses in fuel flow as your tank empties out.
—Noel
NWade wrote:As others have mentioned: It is important that the Aeroinjector is the *lowest* point in the fuel system. From the photos you showed, it appears that your gascolator is lower than the Aeroinjector. That is going to cause lots of problems. First, any bubbles or vapor will get trapped in the system with that layout. Second, by forcing the fuel to run “uphill” after the gascolator you may see dramatic losses in fuel flow as your tank empties out.
gethomas wrote:...[snip] it appears to me that the installation as shown in the AeroVee manual does not work. [snip]... Is the Sonex/Aerovee design, plans and manual really this unreliable? Has Sonex ever built an airplane as shown on the plans?
gethomas wrote:... [snip] I was on a bit of a rant from frustration of spending many hours reworking things because what the plans/manuals show and what works were different. My expectations going into the project were that Sonex had a good reputation and product and if I carefully followed the plans that I would have a flying airplane with minimal problems.
gethomas wrote:I can't accept your comment that the plans are suggestions or a starting point and will require massaging. I expected Sonex to have verified that the design and construction as shown on the plans did not require additional builder modification , experimentation or guess work. Maybe I had unreasonable expectations?
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