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- Past hour
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That inline fuse is for dome light and panel clock. Clearly on the schematic.
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@Freddb34, this is very correct. The best way to stop is to cross the numbers at the right speed. I don't use my brakes until slowing to 50 mph.
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let's be honest, these problems would've been sorted long ago if the money was in it. heck there was too little money to change fuels for 50 years only happening now due to threats from congress. current environment, someone pay enough i bet we coudl get rid of those threats atleast for another 10 to 15 years
- Yesterday
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It looks as though you are doing well with your landings, which is a good thing as many new Mooney pilots tend to land too fast that can result in more than a bad hair day. You may already may be aware, but be mindful of harsh brake application as older Mooney brakes tend to be sensitive if applied too hard that can result in flat spotted tyres. Congrats and enjoy the ride.
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FLYFST started following how to start without an electric fuel pump
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There has been so much trouble with the "new tech" Lycoming iE2 TEO-540 that Tecnam switched to "old tech" Continental GTSIO-520 engines. Reportedly Cape Air retrofitted engines. Continental GTSIO-520-S ready for P2012 installation | Magazine | Business Air News Tecnam offers Continental engine option for P2012 Traveller and Sentinel series
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Sorry, I just meant if the FADEC was available for the IO-360 as an STC add-on I would consider it.
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Speaking of "detuning". Isn't that what Lycoming did when they changed the 200HP IO360 to 20BTDC from 25BTDC? Wouldn't that potentially give the Detuned engines slightly more latitude in detonation?
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In factory configuration, the avionics master is "on" by default meaning if its relay fails, the avionics stay on and won't turn off until the master goes off. When you flip the avionics master switch to off, the relay triggers and severs the connection to the avionics bus. You know the relay has failed when you try to power off the panel but it stays on until you turn the master off. If your avionics master relay in the tail fails, do your radios, flaps, lights, and gear continue to work? Or does your entire panel go dark? Where would you look to find the answer to the question, if you don't know?
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I would prefer leaving as is and just learning more about how everything works. It’s been flawless with this one exception.
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If it were my plane, I would want that extra relay and 3-way avionics master switch removed and everything returned to stock configuration. There are reasons and failure mode considerations it's done the way it is, and what you are experiencing may be one of the reasons the factory didn't include the option to turn on the avionics with the master off in the first place.
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Yup, leaning heavily towards that in line fuse. Thank you!
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Sounds like if your 3-way avionics master switch were to fail or have an internal short, it could be back-feeding power into your master relay or your panel, depending on how they wired it. You know something is back feeding power, and it would have to be either the fused line you sent a picture of, or your non-stock avionics master relay.
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Just a relay for the avionics master. It’s connected to a three way switch in the panel, UP only works when the master is on, middle is off and down powers the avionics even with the master off.
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I have a similar inline fuse. In my plane, it connects directly to the main power line coming off the battery at the master relay, so it is always hot, and runs forward into the cabin. It therefore provides always-hot power to something in the cabin, though I never figured out exactly what, or if it's even still connected to anything. I would expect it to be something like a clock or cabin light that you would want powered with the master off. For what you describe, I am still suspicious of the mystery 3rd not-stock relay mounted to the aft of your battery without any terminal covers. Someone has done something non-standard with your wiring. Does that relay send any power thorough wires forward into the cockpit?
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Do you have a SureFly mag? They require a hot lead per the installation documents, often taken from the master relay..
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Put the brand new relay in, same behavior. What we found was with the master power off but still getting power to the panel, pulling the FLAP cb killed the power. With no power going to the panel, inline fuse in, flap cb out, we can still lower the flaps. That is bizarre. Does anyone else have this inline fuse on the master relay?
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Congrarulations. When you can, post some photos.
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Yikes. Having a bad day?
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there are two of them on the Tecnam P2012 twin that was purpose built for Cape Air, to replace their aging Cessna 402's.
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FYI, here is the Chinese company that makes TEL. https://www.tetraethylleadcn.com/tetraethyl-lead/tetraethyl-lead-ethyl-liquid.html
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I cannot find any articles online about any experimentals running the Flyefii system on a 100 octane engine with UL94 or auto fuel. The flyefii website claims it is possible, but It doesn’t look like anybody has actually done it.
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Either or huh? There’s no way to design a gearbox you think that is both reliable and light? Someone call Rotax and tell them they’re breaking fundamental laws of physics! Or the Adept team! Of course wee need engines that run on higher RPM! That’s where the innovation is needed! If these lazy poor excuses for engineers at Lyco and Conti had any self respect and weren’t such bums they could have designed this DECADES ago. You know how I know? You have turboprops running with gearboxes that don’t break and aren’t prohibitively heavy!! Modern car engines are spaceships compared to what we are stuck with. And no one will tell me the same innovation can’t be done for us.
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Saw 141 IAS today for a 174 TAS at FL105 at 65% (27/22)
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kortopates started following Getting my first Mooney!
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I've always heard it described as "has the glide ratio of a sewer lid," but "like a brick" is gentler.