RussellJ
Pre-Flight
Been flying for 30 years and the only time I had an engine failure was due to a glob of silicone sealant. Bought myself a twin and had roughly 15 hours in it. Took off from a local airport with my CFI in the right seat, positive rate of climb, put the wheels away and then the left engine went quiet. The plane was lightly loaded so it wasn’t too big of a deal, rate of climb dropped from 1000 fpm to 400 fpm until we got things sorted out (trying to decide if one of us might have initiated a simulated engine out) and feathered the prop. Once feathered it accelerated nicely and we continued to climb to a safe altitude. After unsuccessfully trying to restart the engine we landed back at the airport to see what happened. Found a ball of silicone blocking the inlet to the engine driven fuel pump. Fuel selector valves, electric boost pumps, cross-feed valves are all upstream of that pump so there was no chance of restoring fuel to the engine in flight. It looked like a cable was chafing against an elbow on the inlet side of the pump and someone put a glob of silicone between them to stop it from rubbing. It did a good job of holding the cable but… apparently there was a tiny hole already worn into the threads of the elbow when the silicone was applied. My theory is over time as the engine driven pump was drawing fuel from the tanks it was also pulling on that glob of sealant. Once enough of the sealant was drawn into the line the flow of fuel pulled it loose blocking off the inlet to the pump. I have seen people use silicone that way plenty of times before so it didn’t bother me when I saw it there. But now I know, if there’s silicone on a fuel line, remove it and see if there’s any wear on the lines, then maybe use an Adel clamp to hold it or find a way to reroute the offending cable. Silicone and fuel don’t mix.