mike.smith wrote:Just to play devil's advocate... There is about 2' of fuel line from the tank to the AeroInjector. That's not enough length to hold enough fuel to even taxi to the end of the runway. If there's water in the fuel line, or in the bottom of the tank, it's going to make it to the AeroInjector in less than a minute, and get coughed out. That's why so many Sonexes (a majority?) fly without a gascolator. 480 hours without one for me. Thousands of hours for others without one, too.
Make your own informed decision, but it's good to think through both sides of the topic.
GraemeSmith wrote:
So I think I LIKE this picture because after the cube it APPEARS there is a flexible braided line to the firewall. Am I correct in this supposition? Because it would seem to me that if there was firewall deformation or tank strap failure in a crash - that braided line could perform an important shock absorbing function and protect tank integrity.
BRS wrote:Fuel tank vent suction. OK that is a trick term. I was noticing that my fuel tank tube, and I think it's the stock setup, drags the vent below the cowl. I got to thinking that if that vent line is facing aft it could draw a low pressure on the tank contributing to fuel flow issues in flight. On the Sportsman forum there was a discussion last week where a owner described fuel starvation because he had a fuel cap vent that had swiveled aft. It was an eye opener.
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