After this weekend, now I have a question. As I said in my previous post I have always had very uneven burn in my 182Q.
I flew the other day and set the fuel to pull from the right tank as that is the one it seems to never pull from. I flew like that for a uneventful 45 minutes before, all of the sudden, I got a rpm decrease- which was very unpleasant as it woke me up from my traditional cruise flight nap
.
Anyways I switched the fuel back to both and immediately got back by lost rpms. The rest of the flight was fine with not as much as a hiccup. On the way back I pulled from the right again for another 45 mins without any issues. After landing I looked at the tanks and was pretty even, both about 15 gals lower than the full they were are the start of the day.
So I ask the group- what happened and would you be concerned at all?
First, I assume the Q is the same as our P. No vent on the right tank. Vent is on the left. Crossover tube in the top of the left and right tanks.
When that eight plugs up or is full of fuel when the tanks are full, and the right tank is being “suctioned” with no way to get air, the fuel cap has a rubber air valve in it that is supposed to pull down toward the tank and open up.
Under normal pressure (ram air into the vent on the left side that crosses over to the right via the upper vent line) it is lightly pressed upward into a closed condition.
I bet you need a right side new gas cap with new soft/pliable relief vent rubber. (Probably both are hard.) Or someone put a non-vented cap on the right side. Both sides should have the emergency vent. It pulls open if your ram air vent is clogged with anything, including ice/snow. (Which is why the diagram for proper placement of the ram air vent shows it slightly behind the strut but not completely, in the service manual.)
Usually by the time it’s that bad, the rubber cap seal on that cap is also cracking and worn too. Take a look.
You could also have a more dangerous condition, there could be a problem in your fuel selector. More rare, but definitely if you replace the right side cap and can still starve the engine for fuel, have the system checked.
By the way, if you look at the System diagram, you can’t truly isolate the left tank when they’re full. That’s why these systems are always uneven. Even in “Right” mode, when the tanks are full, the left tank is pressurized by the vent and fuel will push across the upper vent line into the right tank until the level falls below the level of the vent line. Then air pressure will equalize across both once it drains, but the left tank will fall for a while with the right tank.
If you always fly with the tanks fairly full, switching to Right isn’t doing anything useful other than adding wear to the fuel selector. Ha.
But check that emergency vent in the gas cap.