Prior owner Posted April 24, 2019 Report Posted April 24, 2019 For those of you with carbureted lycomings, what kind of fuel pressure indication are you seeing when you switch the electric fuel pump on prior to cranking the engine? I’m troubleshooting mine. Quote
7.Mooney.Driver.0 Posted April 24, 2019 Report Posted April 24, 2019 Mine just came back from OH and i’m getting a steady 5psi, before that it was getting between 3-6psi Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Prior owner Posted April 24, 2019 Author Report Posted April 24, 2019 Thanks... mine is showing about 0.5 psi... what did it cost for an overhaul? Quote
7.Mooney.Driver.0 Posted April 24, 2019 Report Posted April 24, 2019 I sent mine to aeromotors llc and they did a complete overhaul for $450. http://www.aeromotorsllc.com/aeromotorsllc/Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Quote
Prior owner Posted April 24, 2019 Author Report Posted April 24, 2019 47 minutes ago, siu1526 said: I sent mine to aeromotors llc and they did a complete overhaul for $450.http://www.aeromotorsllc.com/aeromotorsllc/ Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Thank you again! 1 Quote
7.Mooney.Driver.0 Posted April 24, 2019 Report Posted April 24, 2019 No problem. Good luck with everything.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Hank Posted April 24, 2019 Report Posted April 24, 2019 I run my pump until fuel pressure stabilizes, then turn it off, and push mixture to Full Rich. Fuel Pressure is right at the top of the green arc. Each time I pump the throttle, pressure goes down some. Then I crank up. Never noticed fuel pressure while idling, but it's usually around 2psi in flight, but can vary as high as 5 or as low as 0.5. Still runs good regardless. Quote
Prior owner Posted April 25, 2019 Author Report Posted April 25, 2019 Hmmmm. While taxiing, my pressure exceeds the red line sightly with both pumps operating. 1 Quote
0TreeLemur Posted April 25, 2019 Report Posted April 25, 2019 1 hour ago, PilotCoyote said: Hmmmm. While taxiing, my pressure exceeds the red line sightly with both pumps operating. Mine does the same during taxi. Often times when I throttle back as in a descent it goes above 6.0 psi to something like 6.7 to 7.0. Never more than about 7 psi. The electric fuel pump switched on as per the before landing checklist has no effect. I just clear the EDM900 alarm so I can focus on landing. Annoying. It seems like if the company could relax that redline it would be a benefit for those of us with contemporary engine monitors. When it was a tiny little gauge over by the co-pilot's left knee, a slight 1 psi overpressure wasn't a distraction like it is now. 3 Quote
DXB Posted April 25, 2019 Report Posted April 25, 2019 1 hour ago, PilotCoyote said: Hmmmm. While taxiing, my pressure exceeds the red line sightly with both pumps operating. 2 minutes ago, Fred₂O said: Mine does the same during taxi. Often times when I throttle back as in a descent it goes above 6.0 psi to something like 6.7 to 7.0. Never more than about 7 psi. The electric fuel pump switched on as per the before landing checklist has no effect. I just clear the EDM900 alarm so I can focus on landing. Annoying. It seems like if the company could relax that redline it would be a benefit for those of us with contemporary engine monitors. When it was a tiny little gauge over by the co-pilot's left knee, a slight 1 psi overpressure wasn't a distraction like it is now. I think this may be a common if not universal issue with the normal certified psi range for fuel pressure on the C model. I have the same "problem," which no A&P seems to think is important, so I ignore it now too. The mandatory alerts that must be programmed into the certified JPI unit based on this parameter are indeed annoying, distracting, and potentially desensitizing to real alerts on the unit. I also get the red flashing annunciation whenever I turn on boost pump for takeoff or landing. 2 Quote
carusoam Posted April 25, 2019 Report Posted April 25, 2019 It would be interesting if somebody could update/modernize the spec or an alternate spec (to not Require everyone to need a JPI)... Then have JPI program the device... to not alarm, unless the modern spec is surpassed... a modern spec would probably include time with the scale of excursion.... It seems many of us get desensitizing alarms on the T/O roll no matter which engine/prop combination we have. PP thoughts only, -a- Quote
0TreeLemur Posted April 25, 2019 Report Posted April 25, 2019 5 minutes ago, carusoam said: It seems many of us get desensitizing alarms on the T/O roll no matter which engine/prop combination we have. Yep. I've gotten in the habit of punching the ignore button on the JPI EDM900 after advancing the throttle if the alarm is flashing red and I verify that it is the f.p. 2 Quote
Hank Posted April 25, 2019 Report Posted April 25, 2019 I've never noticed the fuel pressure in my takeoff roll. Then again, that little needle is a ways off, and the numbers are barely visible in the left side of the gauge. Took a while last night finding a panel shot with the numbers visible, most just show the needle pointing anywhere from 7:00-9:00. Quote
Prior owner Posted April 25, 2019 Author Report Posted April 25, 2019 (edited) Thank you for all the input... I should probably mention that we haven’t serviced the pump screen yet- it was further down on the list. So I’ve got to do that prior to passing judgment on the pump. just found this thread regarding the filter screen that I might have in there: Dukes secret screen Edited April 25, 2019 by PilotCoyote Quote
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