I like reasoned debate and always try to list the pros/cons of every solution so that the reader can evaluate what they are most comfortable with. When building an airplane, it's extremely important to consider risk. If you don't want to think deeply about risk, then build exactly to plans and use a new certified engine.
svyolo I follow your logic that as long as you have that hall effect sensor up front, why stop with EI, why not EFI, however I think there are some significant distinctions between EI/mechanical injection and EFI. I point them out for others as I know you have already considered these things.
1. EFI uses a return to tank fuel system. This doesn't sound like a big deal but if you return to tank you can't have both (which isn't a problem for me personally) or you have to use a header tank. If you have the header tank you need to put it somewhere and protect it, if you don't, then you absolutely need to make sure that the fuel system can't consume and cycle the fuel back into the tank faster than gravity can flood the inlet of the pump, even if it becomes unported. Sucking up all of the fuel and spitting back it into the tank faster than the fuel can gather and fall back down to the inlet of the pump when at idle and low on fuel is a dangerous situation. Personally, I'd be making sure the pump is flooded at 150% of what it can consume (which is a lot) and that there is enough fuel in the lines to keep it flooded even if unported for 10 seconds (which might be possible with 1/2 lines, you'd have to do the math) or I would have a header tank.
2. Running EI only on a small battery is no big deal. A six cylinder engine only needs 1.75 amps per EI unit with coils. So, if you have an alternator failure you have a bit of time before the fan stops. If you turn off ECU2 (assuming you have two installed) then you have even more time, and if you have a 7ah battery on a single ecu/coil, you can finish your flight before you run out. Moving to EFI, SDS provides this table:
Typical Lycoming 360/540 injector current draw is about 2 amps for 360 and 3 amps for 540, when running standard 46lb/hr injectors supplied with almost every kit. The injectors are running approximately 50% duty cycle.
That is a LOT more power. Basically, I'm totally fine running EI off of a battery (especially a little dedicated backup battery), but I wouldn't use EFI without a decent sized battery and a second alternator.
3. EI (the CPI-2 at least) doesn't require complex wiring. You terminate the brain box(en) on a normal electrical bus and then run a wire to the little backup battery. The wiring to your coil is redundant (one for each unit), the wiring to you crank pickup is redundant (one for each unit), and if your electrical bus shorts to ground, it just swings to the little battery which is on a completely different wire. There aren't any switches you need to flip or things you need to do. The battery fault lights up and the engine keeps running. With EFI, if you have a bus short to ground you must switch to the secondary bus or you need to install two buses (one for each unit) and isolate them. Even then you would need to swing the injectors to the other ECU in an emergency. Wiring is slightly different between EFII32 and SDS, but from what I understand you will end up with emergency switches on the dash, and it requires you to really think about modes of failure when installing it.
All of this said, you can for sure design a redundant electrical system and a suitable fuel system, it's just harder and it needs to be tested. At least one bearhawk has crashed due to an EFI system that quit working (apologies to the talented builder of n22gm). For my part, I don't think the additional complexity is worth it over mechanical FI. The only advantage I can think of is that you can run mogas, even ethanol laced crap, hot restarts are easier, and you don't have to worry about mixture. Those are nice features to be sure, but for me I think it takes the airplane from dependent on a main battery failing to a dedicated battery to being completely electrically dependent in every way.
Anyway, I figured some distinctions where in order so that others reading this can understand the trade-offs and decide for themselves.
svyolo I follow your logic that as long as you have that hall effect sensor up front, why stop with EI, why not EFI, however I think there are some significant distinctions between EI/mechanical injection and EFI. I point them out for others as I know you have already considered these things.
1. EFI uses a return to tank fuel system. This doesn't sound like a big deal but if you return to tank you can't have both (which isn't a problem for me personally) or you have to use a header tank. If you have the header tank you need to put it somewhere and protect it, if you don't, then you absolutely need to make sure that the fuel system can't consume and cycle the fuel back into the tank faster than gravity can flood the inlet of the pump, even if it becomes unported. Sucking up all of the fuel and spitting back it into the tank faster than the fuel can gather and fall back down to the inlet of the pump when at idle and low on fuel is a dangerous situation. Personally, I'd be making sure the pump is flooded at 150% of what it can consume (which is a lot) and that there is enough fuel in the lines to keep it flooded even if unported for 10 seconds (which might be possible with 1/2 lines, you'd have to do the math) or I would have a header tank.
2. Running EI only on a small battery is no big deal. A six cylinder engine only needs 1.75 amps per EI unit with coils. So, if you have an alternator failure you have a bit of time before the fan stops. If you turn off ECU2 (assuming you have two installed) then you have even more time, and if you have a 7ah battery on a single ecu/coil, you can finish your flight before you run out. Moving to EFI, SDS provides this table:
ECU (each) | .08-.13 |
Fuel Pump (each) | 4-6 |
Injectors (each pair of 2) | 2-4 |
Injectors (each bank of 3) | 3-6 |
Injectors (each) | 1-2 |
Coil Pack 4 cyl. (each) | 1-4 |
Coil Pack 6 cyl. (each) | 2-6 |
Check Engine Light | .1 |
Advance Switch Power | .1 |
RPM Switch Relay Power | .3 |
That is a LOT more power. Basically, I'm totally fine running EI off of a battery (especially a little dedicated backup battery), but I wouldn't use EFI without a decent sized battery and a second alternator.
3. EI (the CPI-2 at least) doesn't require complex wiring. You terminate the brain box(en) on a normal electrical bus and then run a wire to the little backup battery. The wiring to your coil is redundant (one for each unit), the wiring to you crank pickup is redundant (one for each unit), and if your electrical bus shorts to ground, it just swings to the little battery which is on a completely different wire. There aren't any switches you need to flip or things you need to do. The battery fault lights up and the engine keeps running. With EFI, if you have a bus short to ground you must switch to the secondary bus or you need to install two buses (one for each unit) and isolate them. Even then you would need to swing the injectors to the other ECU in an emergency. Wiring is slightly different between EFII32 and SDS, but from what I understand you will end up with emergency switches on the dash, and it requires you to really think about modes of failure when installing it.
All of this said, you can for sure design a redundant electrical system and a suitable fuel system, it's just harder and it needs to be tested. At least one bearhawk has crashed due to an EFI system that quit working (apologies to the talented builder of n22gm). For my part, I don't think the additional complexity is worth it over mechanical FI. The only advantage I can think of is that you can run mogas, even ethanol laced crap, hot restarts are easier, and you don't have to worry about mixture. Those are nice features to be sure, but for me I think it takes the airplane from dependent on a main battery failing to a dedicated battery to being completely electrically dependent in every way.
Anyway, I figured some distinctions where in order so that others reading this can understand the trade-offs and decide for themselves.
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