Mike W.
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2020
- Messages
- 10
- Display Name
Display name:
Chinook_Pilot
Hi Everyone,
I apologize in advance for the long post, but I (and a few A&Ps) am stumped and looking for a troubleshooting starting point. Here is what I am trying to fix:
A few weeks ago I did a new weight and balance. Tanks were emptied and aircraft weighed...all is good. Refilled tanks and flew the aircraft a few days later. While on an IFR flight at 6000 ft. (80 degrees F) with full tanks, I was about 30 minutes into the flight and I switched tanks from right to left (fuel pump on, switch tanks, fuel pump off). About 30-60 seconds later engine started sputtering and I lost about 500-600 RPM. I immediately turned on the fuel pump and switched tanks back to the right tank. 30-60 seconds later, RPM back to normal and engine smooth. Turned the fuel pump off and engine continued to run fine. Landed at my destination (which was about 10 minutes away). On the ground, I switched back to the left tank and ran the engine at full RPM. I could not duplicate it on the ground. Called my A&P and after a discussion we determined that it could likely have been air in the fuel line since that was the first time that tank was used since the weighing. I flew the aircraft back on the right tank (35 minute flight) just to be safe. Again, after landing I switched back to the left tank and could not duplicate the sputtering and loss of RPM...problem solved. Fast forward to this weekend. I was flying locally for about 45 minutes on the right tank (the good one). I was at 1500-2000 ft. and temp was around 90 degrees F (humidity was pretty high). When I applied power to climb, engine started running rough and lost about 500-600 RPM. I did the same thing as previously, switched to the other tank (left) and turned on the fuel pump. 30-60 seconds later, RPM back and engine smooth. I talked to three different A&Ps and they all had different opinions: 1) Engine driven fuel pump, 2) leak in the fuel line allowing air in, 3) fuel blockage somewhere. All of these seem reasonable, except that it is very intermittent. Any recommendations on where to start troubleshooting? Prefer most conservative first
I apologize in advance for the long post, but I (and a few A&Ps) am stumped and looking for a troubleshooting starting point. Here is what I am trying to fix:
A few weeks ago I did a new weight and balance. Tanks were emptied and aircraft weighed...all is good. Refilled tanks and flew the aircraft a few days later. While on an IFR flight at 6000 ft. (80 degrees F) with full tanks, I was about 30 minutes into the flight and I switched tanks from right to left (fuel pump on, switch tanks, fuel pump off). About 30-60 seconds later engine started sputtering and I lost about 500-600 RPM. I immediately turned on the fuel pump and switched tanks back to the right tank. 30-60 seconds later, RPM back to normal and engine smooth. Turned the fuel pump off and engine continued to run fine. Landed at my destination (which was about 10 minutes away). On the ground, I switched back to the left tank and ran the engine at full RPM. I could not duplicate it on the ground. Called my A&P and after a discussion we determined that it could likely have been air in the fuel line since that was the first time that tank was used since the weighing. I flew the aircraft back on the right tank (35 minute flight) just to be safe. Again, after landing I switched back to the left tank and could not duplicate the sputtering and loss of RPM...problem solved. Fast forward to this weekend. I was flying locally for about 45 minutes on the right tank (the good one). I was at 1500-2000 ft. and temp was around 90 degrees F (humidity was pretty high). When I applied power to climb, engine started running rough and lost about 500-600 RPM. I did the same thing as previously, switched to the other tank (left) and turned on the fuel pump. 30-60 seconds later, RPM back and engine smooth. I talked to three different A&Ps and they all had different opinions: 1) Engine driven fuel pump, 2) leak in the fuel line allowing air in, 3) fuel blockage somewhere. All of these seem reasonable, except that it is very intermittent. Any recommendations on where to start troubleshooting? Prefer most conservative first