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Vacuum pump replacement  

45 members have voted

  1. 1. When do/did you replace your dry vacuum pump ?

    • 500 hours
      11
    • When it dies
      28
    • Some other criteria (please elaborate)
      6


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Posted

We sent the Dual Mag out for service and while we are at it the vacuum pump will be replaced. It has a little over 500 hrs and was on the list for this coming annual so needs to be done anyway. 

So I was bored and I sensed that you guys are too, so I made this poll. 

  • Like 1
Posted

I went with... When it dies...   I’m VFR only, and have a spare electric pump...

When I get back to IFR, I’ll be getting an electric AI as well...

One question... Bartman, are you going to take your own poll?  :)

Best regards,

-a-

  • Like 1
Posted

When it dies. 

Nice thing about STEC autopilots is they don’t need no stinking vacuum to keep the wings level and to hold altitude. 

  • Like 4
Posted

While most last about 500 hours, dry vacuum pumps can fail for no rhyme, or reason.  Preemptively changing one may find you replacing a good one with one which will fail prematurely.

Vacuum pump failure is no fun IFR, but that's why we practice partial panel.

I've had several fail, all during VMC, which has emboldened me to change them when they fail.

Posted
10 minutes ago, Marauder said:

What’s a vacuum pump? emoji23.png

It's the thing only my speedbrakes need.....:D

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Posted

I selected 500 hours, but in reality a failure always seems to beat me to it, usually at just over 500 hours and  before I get around to changing it.  If I were flying hard IMC a lot, I would be more religious about changing it before I got to 500 hours.

Posted

500 hours...I wish. New pump failed at 350 hours. Only needed for the speed brakes but no reasonable alternative. So, I guess I will just replace when it dies. 

Posted
3 hours ago, Marauder said:

What’s a vacuum pump? emoji23.png

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro

 

I’ll be in that same boat this time next week. Installing the G5 and removing the vacuum pump. 

  • Like 1
Posted

I've flown my Mooney's for 4700 hours and have had 3 failures. Lucky I guess.

All VFR.

Im a CB so I replaced them when they fail.

i just removed my standby vacuum system. I don't need it any more and it exceeded  my alternators capacity.

Posted

Had a couple die at less than 100 hours and one go 1200 hours.  All the rest failed around 600 hours. Only one gave notice of impending death, low pressure for a couple hours on a trip. Next start it worked normally (ordered pump, VFR weather) but failed on a four hour trip home.

Once on the ILS into Little Rock, my wife elbowed me, tore half the cover off an NOS book, handed it to me to put over the AH.  Now that's a co-pilot!

  • Like 3
Posted

Well I do have the precise flight standby vacuum so maybe I will discuss with the IA about keeping what I have.  I do fly IMC and the vacuum is required to drive my attitude indicator for my old Century IIb.  I tested the standby in the past with the pump disconnected in test mode and if I remember it's good to about 8000 feet or something like that, but I did not run the autopilot. 

Interestingly when I first purchased the plane we found that the valve for the Precise Flight standby was hooked up wrong.  The valve was in the "on" position when the knob on the panel was in the "off" position.  We found that immediately when I had the JPI 700 monitor installed.

Posted

I also responded with when it fails.  Mine failed 4 hours into new ownership of my C.  Autopilot worked well before the failure now it will only turn left.  Accuflite and Accutrak II. 

Posted

I have had the vacuum AI and the vacuum step servo fail. But I have not lost a pump. I did replace it along with mags when I had a prop strike.

I will wait for it to fail rather than do a preemptive replacement.

Posted

In my last M20E, I had 2 vacuum pump failures in 23 years (about 2200 hours) of ownership, both in VFR conditions.  Also had the Precise standby vac system. 

During the first failure, I decreased manifold pressure to enable the Precise standby to generate vacuum.  Then I realized that my sTec worked independent of vacuum, and decided to return to normal cruise speed and fly using the autopilot and compass.

Our current M20C vacuum pump is well over 500 hours.  We carry a spare pump in the luggage compartment.

  • Like 2
Posted
3 hours ago, Kmac said:

I also responded with when it fails.  Mine failed 4 hours into new ownership of my C.  Autopilot worked well before the failure now it will only turn left.  Accuflite and Accutrak II. 

That's where I'm at right now.  I have about 4 hours in my new C model and the vacuum pump failed on the last flight.  I'd love to do 2xG5s and remove the vacuum pump but doesn't the vacuum pull up my retractable step and run the PC?  I always intended to do that with my 172M but now I don't think I can with a M20C.

Posted

I went with when it dies.  At this point my #1 artificial horizon is the G600, #2 is an electric mid-continent, and #3 is the vacuum Sigma-Tek.  The vacuum pump only operates it and sucks up the retractable step.

John Breda

Posted
Is anyone using a wet pump?

I would wet myself if the vacuum pump went out in imc. Does that count?


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  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Posted
4 hours ago, Mooneymite said:

Is anyone using a wet pump?

I use the Air Wolf wet vacuum pump in my 231, also have the stand-by electric pump installed.

 

Ron

  • Like 1

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