Mikey1719
Filing Flight Plan
I am purchasing a 172S whose fuel gauges drop to zero intermittently and independendantly of each other. Pre-buy inspector thinks it might be the sensors. Anyone have any experience with this issue?
Check wiring and connections first.I am purchasing a 172S whose fuel gauges drop to zero intermittently and independendantly of each other. Pre-buy inspector thinks it might be the sensors. Anyone have any experience with this issue?
"They all do that"
Really, the Part 141 school I did PPL at had a fleet of five - all had intermittently hinky fuel read outs.
Sensors were replaced on regular basis - to no real effect IMHO.
Very simply put, the sender is a potentiometer, open circuit is empty, zero ohms (closed) is full. the float arm sweeps a winding changing the resistance of the circuit. over time you'll get dead spots on this winding (dirt, lacquer, etc.) causing the gauge to show zero in various spots.
You can buy replacement senders, they'll last a few years (maybe) and end up doing the same thing. http://www.mcfarlaneaviation.com/Products/?ID=71619535&CategoryID=164&
Or you can go to an aftermarket unit : https://www.ciescorp.net/cessna.html more $$ but hopefully a one time deal.
or you can do like every other pilot since Cessna started production... Dip your tanks, know your fuel burn, use a timer, ignore those gauges.
Nope. Carbon-track potentiometers, as opposed to the old wirewound units. Not really potentiometers, either; just rheostats. Two terminals instead of three.isn't the 172-S a capacitive system?
Isn't the 172S a G1000 equipped bird?
Is this showing up on the range ring on the G1000 or on the fuel gauges?
isn't the 172-S a capacitive system?
Yeah, I've got balky senders in my Navion. The EI ones are going in during the restoration. I've seen them on two other Navions. They are da bomb compared to the original 50's automotive fuel senders these things really are.
Huh, my Aerospace Logic instrument is teamed up with new MacFarlane resistive transmitters. Kinda impressive to calibrate in one gallon increments for each tank.