Likely suspect is leaky fuel strainer/bowl assembly. It's right above the cowl flap and occasionally needs to be rebuilt. McFarlane rebuild kit pretty cheap, unless fuel bowl itself or other parts have corrosion, then plan on $300-$700 for parts depends what needs replacement.
His Gascolator looks mounted right above the right cowl flap. Looks like the picture also shows blue staining on the lower front strut mount. I had a double whammy 9 months ago... both the Gascolator and aux electric fuel pump started dripping fuel. Both were mounted over the right cowl flap and I had a small amount of blue staining on the hangar floor one day.How does a strainer leak reach the cowl flap leading edge?
Liquids do strange things in flight. Try leak checking a fan jet when you can’t run them with the cowl open.How does a strainer leak reach the cowl flap leading edge?
The fire sleeve would be stained.I have very similar cowl flaps and gascolator. I doubt that's the cause. I'm interested to hear, though. Maybe a leak at a JPI fuel flow transducer? Hard to spot as it's wrapped in fire sleeve?
should be similar....not a 260se, but that's an IO-470 converted 182. Still hard to tellGuys, the pic that ktup posted is not my plane. No JPI either (yet; I wish). I have not even gotten to remove the top cowl yet.
I will check all the injector lines, as well as the return, supply, fuel pump, and gascolator. Hopefully it’s cheap.
On my to-do list is a prop balance. I get more vibration than I think is normal. Late last year I had an old copper fuel pressure (flow) gauge line crack and leak. Besides being old, copper, and probably work hardened, I suspect greater vibration than normal may have caused it.
A nice reminder for others is to clean the plane after every flight. I know the stain is new. Wouldn’t have found it if I didn’t wipe the plane down after every flight (the belly stays oily longer, I’m not that crazy).
should be similar....not a 260se, but that's an IO-470 converted 182. Still hard to tell
How does a strainer leak reach the cowl flap leading edge?
On my to-do list is a prop balance. I get more vibration than I think is normal. Late last year I had an old copper fuel pressure (flow) gauge line crack and leak. Besides being old, copper, and probably work hardened, I suspect greater vibration than normal may have caused it.
There is a lot of air blowing around in there in flight, and it's not all flowing nicely through that area and out past the flap. Leaking oil or fuel can end up in strange places, and gravity has nothing to say about it. I have found stains in some very non-intuitive places. Makes troubleshooting fun.
That said, it might not be the gascolator. Might be something on the other side of the engine altogether. Might be primer line fittings high on the firewall. Or a broken primer line somewhere. Might be a leaking carb drain plug. That picture doesn't help a lot.
Is it a Cessna? Cessna never used copper. They used Everdur, which was a copper-coated steel. It looks like copper and some mechanics have replaced it with copper, which is a mistake. Everdur is tough stuff and doesn't fail easily at all. Copper work-hardens real quick.
That stain doesn’t look like an in flight issue. Too localized.It looks like it had a leak in parking that’s probably already been addressed. But that’s just my opinion. You guys will surely tell me I’m wrong.
Yep, Cessna. I’ve seen the fuel P gauge lines replaced with braided hose, but the 2 A&Ps I talked to said the hard-line is the correct method. Whether it was copper before or not, don’t know, but it was replaced with copper.