Archive for the ‘Firewall Forward’ Category

Installed new fuel pump

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

At last, a chance to work on the airplane! Following much finagling, I managed to get the new fuel pump installed on the engine. It's pretty tricky to keep the thing aligned correctly and get the bolts started, while making sure the pump actuator lever isn't hitting the side of the pushrod way up inside the engine that actually drives the thing.

Not really visible here is the new gasket I installed between the pump and the drive pad. I couldn't get a torque wrench on the bolts – actually I could barely get a hex wrench on them with the engine installed on the airplane – so I just torqued them by feel and installed safety wire. It only took me about five tries to get the safety wire installed properly in the narrow space available.

Since replacing the fuel pump seems like kind of a big deal, I decided to make an entry in the engine logbook. It says: 0.0 hours – Original fuel pump damaged during installation – Replaced fuel pump with new Lycoming LW-15473 in accordance with manufacturer's instructions.

With the fuel pump replacement finally finished, I was now back to where I was a month ago. The next step was to hook up all the hoses, but this time around I didn't want to use a steel fitting for the drain line and risk fracturing the pump again. I decided to use a brass fitting, but I couldn't find one that I could easily substitute for the previous one. Luckily, one of the things I learned when I owned an airplane with a car engine in it – besides the most important lesson, being for goodness sakes, don't ever buy an airplane with a car engine in it – was how to make aircraft and automotive plumbing play together. Here's some 3/16" I.D. automotive rubber fuel hose, a brass hose barb to pipe thread adapter, a brass 3/16" hose to 1/4" AN flare adapter, an AN818-4D flare nut, and some Oetiker stepless hose clamps:

Down at the bottom of the firewall, the rubber hose comes off the suspended plumbing contraption that carries the dumped fuel out the back of the cowling. I really like this method of adapting cheap rubber hose to AN plumbing. Of course, I wouldn't use it for anything other than a vent line, but it's easy to make and I think it looks more professional than the plastic ice maker hose the plans specify for this application. I already had the special tool needed to install Oetiker clamps, so no problem there.

The drain line attaches to the fuel pump via the hose barb fitting, and that's that. I also installed the other three fuel hoses (input, output, and pressure) and torqued all the fittings.

Bad day, with hoses

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Today stated off well but ended poorly…

I wanted to use a restrictor fitting for the connection to the manifold pressure hose, to keep the #3 cylinder from running too lean if the hose breaks. But, Van's only sells a 45-degree restrictor which won't fit on my engine. I had to make my own straight restrictor by filling an AN816 fitting with JB Weld, waiting a day for it to cure, and then drilling a #60 hole through it. Turned out great:

Installed in the port on the #3 cylinder:

The manifold pressure hose attaches to the restrictor fitting, then sort of loops inward:

It's attached to the engine mount with adel clamps, and passes through a fitting I installed in the firewall near the brake fluid reservoir.

The hose that goes between the firewall and the fuel pump inlet is a tight fit, but it works. In this photo I'm using a bungee cord to teach the hose to follow a curve that keeps it away from the engine mount. A couple hours like that and it kept the right shape on its own.

The oil pressure hose exits the right side of the accessory case, loops around to the left, and is secured to the top of the firewall with adel clamps.

The oil pressure hose enters the transducer manifold (top of photo), as does the fuel pressure hose (bottom). Eventually there will be pressure transducers screwed into the manifold, and the unused holes will be plugged.

The fuel pressure hose runs down to a tee on the outlet of the fuel pump (brown hose in center of photo). Also visible in the background is the fuel pump overflow hose, which runs down to the bottom of the firewall.

I have a policy that any hose that carries pressure should be professionally made and tested, but since the fuel pump drain hose doesn't carry any pressure and should rarely even have any fuel in it, I decided to make that one myself. This is Aeroquip 303 hose, using the recommended mandrel for assembly. It's a pain to do properly – I'm glad to leave making the proper hoses to the pros.

Of course, the plans call for the fuel pump overflow hose to be made from plastic tubing, but I thought that was cheesy. My hose is a little heavier but at least it won't melt/crack/etc. The hose runs down to an AN837 fitting that's adel-clamped to the engine mount, and thence a length of aluminum carries the fuel overboard and out the back of the cowling. I drilled out one of the rivets on the firewall flange and used it for a screw and clamp that secures the tubing.

Here's where it all went off the tracks… while installing the very last fitting, the upper one for the fuel pump drain, I accidentally cracked the fuel pump housing:

Another photo with different light. I guess it doesn't take very much torque on a steel fitting to ruin a thin cast-aluminum housing.

After stewing about it for a while, I decided that the fuel pump has to come off to be rebuilt. That meant I had to take off most of the hoses I'd just spent hours installing. I also had to take off the magneto and loosen the prop governor cable bracket just to be able to get at the fuel pump bolts. Nothing on the engine is easy to work on!

After a couple hours of bad language, the fuel pump is now removed from the engine. Hopefully repairing or replacing it won't be too expensive.

I also had to mow the hateful lawn, and the new Indiana Jones movie was not very good, and now I have a headache, so overall this day has been kind of a dud.

Fuel hose

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Believe it or not, it took me an entire afternoon to install the hose that goes between the engine-driven fuel pump on the back of the engine and the fuel injection servo up front. This seemingly simple task was greatly complicated by clearance problems and lack of space to work in (is this starting to sound familiar?). You want the fuel line to be far away from the hot exhaust pipes, but the ideal routing – up over the "wing" of the oil sump – is blocked by the mixture bellcrank. So, I had to play with various routings of the hose until I could find a way to get it as far away from the exhaust as I could, while still staying clear of the mixture linkage when it's in the idle cutoff (worst case) position.

Since the hose is right there, I put some additional heat shields on the exhaust pipes to keep the fuel line cool. In this photo you can see the somewhat circuitous routing the hose takes, as it exits the fuel pump, crosses under an engine mount tube (the photo doesn't show it, but there's an inch of clearance there) and then climbs up away from the exhaust pipes. A pair of back-to-back adel clamps, shown here partially obscured by the exhaust, secures the hose to the #4 intake tube. I ended up with at least an inch of clearance between the heat shields and the hose. By the way, all my fuel/oil hoses are Stratoflex 124J assemblies with integrated firesleeve, made to my specifications by Precision Hose in Tulsa. Good customer service and good prices too.

These clamps were a giant pain to install, because the normal bolt-flinging properties of the adel clamps were magnified by the almost complete lack of access to the area where I wanted to put them. I managed to scrape a bunch of paint off the #2 and #4 intake tubes, but it's all cosmetic stuff.

I need to do better than one hose per day if I'm ever going to finish this thing.

Hose measuring

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

Matittuck included a hose to go from the mechanical fuel pump on the back of the engine up to the fuel injection servo on the front. Here I'm test fitting it to the fuel pump outlet, and I've clamped it to the #4 cylinder's intake tube with adel clamps to keep it away from the exhaust:

The clearance between the hose and the #3 exhaust pipe is not much more than an inch, but there doesn't seem to be anywhere else for the hose to go – the mixture bellcrank gets in the way.

The included hose is too long by a couple inches (it's supposed to attach to the silver inlet port in the middle of the photo). I'll have to have a shorter one made up.

I bought some cheap plastic tubing from the hardware store and used it to measure for the other hoses I'll need to have made, without expensive guessing. Here's what the hose between the firewall and fuel pump inlet will look like:

Only somewhat visible here is the mockup of how the oil pressure hose will go:

Here's the stand-in for the manifold pressure hose:

I ended up with templates and measurements for five different hoses (I forgot to take a picture of the faux fuel pressure hose).

While I was messing around with the fuel servo, I replaced the nyloc nut on the mixture shaft with an all-metal locknut:

Alternator belt

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

There's a bolt at either end of the alternator tension arm, both of which need to be safetied. Some folks use one long length of safety wire between the two bolts, but that seems like it would be a pain when the belt inevitably wears out (since you need to loosen the bottom bolt to replace the belt). I also didn't want to just loop safety wire around the arm itself, since it would eventually vibrate and dig a groove into the steel.

So, I came up with what I think is a clever way of safetying the two bolts… first I drilled a pair of #30 holes in the meaty part of the arm:

Then I grabbed some #4 steel tinnerman washers and 1/8" steel pop rivets:

When riveted to the arm, the washer sits up above the surface just the right height to capture a loop of safety wire. The wire then bears on the steel pop rivet stem instead of wearing a groove in the arm.

With the ring gear removed, it's pretty easy to safety the upper bolt.

After putting on the belt and adjusting the tension, the lower bolt gets torqued and safetied in the same manner:

For future reference, the belt that seems to fit the best is a Gates 7360:

I tried a 7355 and it did fit, but it was very tough to install. I'll use the slightly longer belt unless I end up having clearance problems between the alternator and cowl.