timwinters
Ejection Handle Pulled
I've heard this "condensation myth" alleged before, supposedly by HVAC "experts" and others who have "done the math." However, after decades, apparently no one has been able to convince the FAA or NTSB, both of which continue to promote the risk of aircraft fuel tank condensation.
This is timely, as there was an accident analysis in this month's Flying magazine involving a Cherokee 6.
NTSB determined that the fuel had water due to condensation/moisture build up over those 2 months of inactivity
How does the NTSB know he had sumped at any time in the previous 20 years either?
Where was this by the way?
You said it'd been sitting for two months in a hangar half full of fuel. So let's do the math.
The Cherokee 6 has a capacity of 84 gallons (from a google search) thus the air in tanks = 42 gallons.
Assumptions:
Assume a daily range of 20 degrees at 75% relative humidity, 95*F highs, 75*F lows (and that ain't gonna happen...@ 75% relative humidity air doesn't move in temperature that much on a typical day but we'll use 20 degrees as a worse case scenario. Plus air typically isn't 75% RH during the highest temps of the day, it's closer to 65% even in the sultry south)
Assume a 100% exchange of air in the tanks EVERY DAY for 60 days (and that ain't gonna happen either unless the caps were left off and even then I doubt it).
Conversions:
95*F = 35*C
75*F = 24*C
1 oz = 28 grams
1 lb = 0.45 kg
air weighs 1.2 kg / cubic meter
1 cubic meter = 264 gallons
Hard Data & Calculations:
95*F air at 75% RH holds 38 grams of moisture / KG of air
75*F air at 100% RH holds 20 grams of moisture / KG of air
see chart here
42 gallons = 0.19 KG of air
The above described air dumps 18 grams (38-20=18) of moisture per KG per night so 18 x .19 = 3.42 grams dumped per 42 gallons of "air space" in the tanks.
3.42 grams x 60 days = 205 grams
205 grams x .036 = 7.3 oz. of water (in both tanks).
Actual amounts would be a fraction of that...less than 25%...because the temperature in the tanks of a hangared airplane isn't going to fluctuate as much as the outdoor ambient and you'll never achieve a 100% change of air each day.
So, two ounces of water would be reasonable to expect...one ounce per tank.
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