Bob has made some suggestions for flying your planes:
OPERATION OF BEARHAWK FUEL SYSTEM
Take off and land on Both at fuel valve selector.. Be sure
both tanks have fuel in them.
Cruise can be on left or right to insure both tanks have fuel in them.
Both can be used if flow is about even.
In rough air on landing stay high, do not drag it in if fuel is low.
Bob has no problem with any of us adding a vent tube between the two tanks. With a gravity flow system, he does not think it needed. But no harm for sure except the following point. If you do add a cross vent tube, you will have fuel coming out of the gas caps if you park the plane on a slope. Without the cross vent, you can just turn the selector valve to off.
Bob understands that having any fuel pump, especially the higher pressure pumps used with fuel injected engines - will suck air and not fuel if given the opportunity. He thinks the Continental fuel injection system might be a little worse in this regard than the Bendix system used on Lycomings.
He feels with low fuel level in the tanks, slipping or skidding (or even rough air) while on approach to landing can cause an interruption of fuel flow. If you think about being in a bank and slipping or skidding so the fuel in the upper wing tank sloshes outboard could un port the fuel outlets. Mark
OPERATION OF BEARHAWK FUEL SYSTEM
Take off and land on Both at fuel valve selector.. Be sure
both tanks have fuel in them.
Cruise can be on left or right to insure both tanks have fuel in them.
Both can be used if flow is about even.
In rough air on landing stay high, do not drag it in if fuel is low.
Bob has no problem with any of us adding a vent tube between the two tanks. With a gravity flow system, he does not think it needed. But no harm for sure except the following point. If you do add a cross vent tube, you will have fuel coming out of the gas caps if you park the plane on a slope. Without the cross vent, you can just turn the selector valve to off.
Bob understands that having any fuel pump, especially the higher pressure pumps used with fuel injected engines - will suck air and not fuel if given the opportunity. He thinks the Continental fuel injection system might be a little worse in this regard than the Bendix system used on Lycomings.
He feels with low fuel level in the tanks, slipping or skidding (or even rough air) while on approach to landing can cause an interruption of fuel flow. If you think about being in a bank and slipping or skidding so the fuel in the upper wing tank sloshes outboard could un port the fuel outlets. Mark
Comment