JasonM
Pattern Altitude
How common is this? Almost every hose is leaking or seeping oil. This is on a Cessna T182T. It is leaking enough oil that all around the bottom engine seal (pan?) looks like it is leaking.
Is that something I am allowed to do or do I need an A&P? Replace the hoses that is..
Are you saying that these are supposed to leak?
.
They aren't supposed to but they all seem to.
They're oil drain tubes for the rocker boxes.
Sorry Jason I was pulling your chain.
Old joke, if something on a (jeep, ford, chevy) ain't leaking, it's empty.
Snug the hose clamps down a little by hand, and fly on. Or just fly it. A little bit of weeping like that is fine. If the hose is cracked, or leaking so bad it is dripping, then it needs to be replaced.
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FAR 43 App. A (21).
It is NOT preventive maintenance.
There we go. I'm all for this.
Any good idea on where to order the hoses?
Would replacing these require me to drain the oil first?
It is NOT preventive maintenance.
The oil does not need to be drained.
Find the part number in your IPC then call a parts distributor. We usually use AERO for that kind of stuff.
No oil draining is necessary, you don't even know if replacing is necessary. Tighten the clamps, clean up the engine, and see if the leak stops. Using a socket driver as above allows a much better ability to get proper tightness on them. If the rubber still feels firm, it should be ok. It gets squishy and gooey, or hard and brittle when the hose needs replacing.
No oil draining is necessary, you don't even know if replacing is necessary. Tighten the clamps, clean up the engine, and see if the leak stops. Using a socket driver as above allows a much better ability to get proper tightness on them. If the rubber still feels firm, it should be ok. It gets squishy and gooey, or hard and brittle when the hose needs replacing.
Yes. Do this first. You'd rather not replace these if you don't have to.
Seems like a poor design if it happens so often. Am I missing something?
Is this the place? http://www.aeroinstock.com/
Yes...
I agree with the other guys, try snugging up the clamps first. Many of them get over tightened trying to stop leaks though, you can squish the rubber out pretty easily even with new hoses.
About half the hoses on my 2004 T182T have been changed out to the brown teflon hoses.
Yes, the design is the same they came up with during WWII lol. The thing is, to do it a different, better way requires fittings of considerable expense. Since there is no pressure on these hoses, there is no good reason to use Aeroquip or swaged fitting hoses to flared fittings and the expense associated there with. This design is from back in the day when people actually worked on their engines and knew that things needed occasional tightening and adjusting.
but. but. but.. this motor a'int no WWII salvage $#*T. Sheesh. C'mon Cessna!!
How does this not fit under preventative maintenance? There is no replacing, modifying, or repairing going on, he his just tightening some hose clamps.
Yeah, I was thinking in terms of replacing.
Remember where you ordered those?
I don't like those clamps. They will slice in to the rubber when torqued down thereby releasing the tension you're trying to impose on the hose and pipe connection. They also strip very easily. As a matter of fact the clamp towards the top of your picture looks rather suspicious. There are better clamps often sold as fuel injection hose clamps. They have an inner sleeve that wraps around the hose as you tighten it, protecting the integrity of the hose. I recently replaced all my hoses and clamps for that reason. The clamps next to the case were really fun... NOT!