Dan Thomas
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Dan Thomas
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Fellow I worked with took two pairs of 6" vise-grips and brazed small jaws made of 4130 to them. Gave me one. Used it for years. Run an awl through the clamp holes, pull it all together with the vise-grips, pull the awl out and drop the screw in. Start the nut, take the vise-grips off.
NOW you tell me.We use that often. First thing to do is dull the awl unless you want a few puncture wounds.
NOW you tell me.
@JAWS I see. I was a jet engine mechanic for 10 years. I remember on the J-79 fitted with the kit for the F-4 there were a whole lot of clamps, especially around the electrical hook up for the aircraft. I remember using those clamps there but turbines are not near as leaky as a GA piston can be. I'd like to see your hacksaw blade tool.
The black braided line is fuel. It was contacting the spark plug wire bundle and looked to be wearing the wire insulation. Is this a possible fix? I’ve heard it’s a no-no to connect fuel lines to wiring.
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Tying wires to tubes that vibrate is bad. Or wires or hoses that vibrate, to tubes.
Tying wires to tubes that vibrate is bad. Or wires or hoses that vibrate, to tubes.
Some of those in the picture are crossing the tubes at 90°. A single tie there puts its edges against the wire, which can damage the wire. I also see wires tied to fuel lines there.
Maybe those are temporary prior to properly being secured!
Like it’s supposed to be covered. How would you do it? Since you’re all critics I assume you all have pics of your last build showing how you did it, right?That's what I was thinking. Also, I'm wondering how that would be covered?
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Like it’s supposed to be covered. How would you do it? Since you’re all critics I assume you all have pics of your last build showing how you did it, right?
Do you know what I won’t use? Tape. Corrosion happens under tape. Corrosion is the enemy of any tube and fabric airplane. I’m much happier with nylon zip ties. They aren’t hard enough to etch my powder coat, let alone the tubes. The stuff you read on the internet isn’t always true.
Pretty hard to do much else with that.@Stewartb @Dan Thomas @wilkersk
And others who asked, this will give you more of an idea of the current layout:
I’m sure that the conventional hose clamp will do the job, but I’ve heard it offered that smooth F.I. clamps are a slightly preferred choice.
Would be handy if you would also post the specific page.Us experimental guys have been using that trick for a long time.
Don't know how they do it for certified planes but I was taught to keep fuel and fire separated by at least six inches and never place fuel above fire. FWIW I like as much separation as I can get so what was done here would not be acceptable to me.
AC No: 43.13-1B gives information to answer these type of questions. In there I read:
"In no case should wiring be supported by the fuel line."
Download a copy here:
https://www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/Advisory_Circular/AC_43.13-1B_w-chg1.pdf
Would be handy if you would also post the specific page.
That said, the AC cited is a wealth of information.
But the
"In no case should wiring be supported by the fuel line." line quoted has naught to do with the OP question. He's not supporting wireing by the fuel line, but just making separation. (assuming they are independently supported) But I would seriously consider re-routing the fuel line in such a manner that it is independently supported, and does not come in contact with anything. But I'm sort of anal about hoses, (both electric, and fluid) and abrasion.
Not criticizing. You put the picture up, and I was just wondering what else went over the keel before the fabric.
And, I've been using fusible tape, for as long as I've been in aviation, and if applied right, it is not corrosion prone. But, I have seen nylon zip ties chafe metal tubes, and I've seen them become brittle from heat and age, and then fail, allowing things to move and chafe where they shouldn't.
That setup we see is the typical fuel-injected installation and there isn't much you can do to reroute that fuel line. If you made a longer hose and ran it under the ignition leads, it would be too close to the hot cylinder heads and create even more hot-start issues. And the hose would age much faster.Seeing as how we are assuming (yep we know what that means) I also think that one not supporting the other means not tying them together i.e. separation. I've been taught that fuel and fire should always be separated and the fuel lines should never be above electrical wiring. Maybe it's just a safety thing with me as I've seen others do this and when it's pointed out they usually see the danger.
As for the reference in AC-43.13-1B or most any other document I press Ctrl+F on the keyboard and type in the wording I'm searching for ...