Tank cleaning, through vent and sender with borescope. 
Ron, 
I pull the vent line at the top and inspect with a borescope the fuel tank and its 
condition.  Replace the rubber hose and reinstall the vent. 
I also can remove my sender (Princeton probe with 1/2 inch hole and use my 
borescope.  If it is clean, fine press on.  If not then: 
Empty the tank, remove the fuel fittings on the bottom.  Install a 1 inch elbow 
(with a plug) onto the tank boss and flush with fresh gas, pull the plug and let her 
drain.  It is about all you can do with your setup. 
 
Bud 
 
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----  
  From: rparigor@suffolk.lib.ny.us<mailto:rparigor@suffolk.lib.ny.us>  
  To: Bud Yerly<mailto:budyerly@msn.com>  
  Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2010 11:53 PM 
  Subject: Clean your tank annually 
 
 
  Hi Bud 
 
  I have a XS mono with 914. I do have a factory float style fuel gauge with reed 
switches. 
 
  How can I clean my tank? 
 
  Ron P. 
 
  > Graham,  
  > How true. I don't think Mr Funnel is even 120 microns. Ultralight news  
  > tested it at .005, which is about 120 microns but who knows. We are not  
  > labs.  
  > I have not been a fan of gascolators as I am in Florida, and have never  
  > seen water in a Poly tank from sweating, but I am sure it is possible. My  
  > fuel drains seem to work, and the filters supplied catch the crap and the  
  > float bowls, have always been clean ((ish) except for in line debris post  
  > filter I failed to clean once) and the filters allow me to switch tanks  
  > when the filter begins to clog (noted from the fuel pressure warning using  
  > my FP-5).  
  >  
  > A single gascolator, as you know, is a single point of failure, and many  
  > have installed two. Why not have two filters and a tank drains as the  
  > manual indicates. I thought that was pretty sound.  
  >  
  > Andy from Andair at Sun n Fun last year told me the same thing about the  
  > gascolator screen and we shared how to inspect (you can't except to  
  > disassemble it) and clean them. Since then I don't even consider a  
  > gascolator. This is a personal preference. Filters are clear to see in,  
  > easy to change, cheap to buy and good enough for me. A quick disconnect  
  > makes it a breeze to pull out and take to the bench and service without  
  > dripping all over the place. If I had a Marvel Schebler Carburetor I'd  
  > use a gascolator. You can drive a truck through the orifice.  
  >  
  > As for old Jerry Cans, cleanliness is next to Godliness, pay attention to  
  > where you get your fuel, Mister Funnel only is a catch for big stuff and  
  > water when refueling in the rain. Keep an eye on your filters, clean your  
  > tank annually, inspect, inspect, inspect, and throw your filters out every  
  > 25 hours along with the old oil and filter...  
  >  
  > Ground your aircraft and your Jerry Can. Those wool sweaters and plastic  
  > bed liners can generate quite a spark. More on fueling at Rough River.  
  >  
  > Thanks for your insight as always.  
  >  
  > Bud.  
  >  
  >  
  > ----- Original Message -----  
  >  
  From: GRAHAM SINGLETON<mailto:grahamsingleton@btinternet.com>  
  > To: europa-list@matronics.com<mailto:europa-list@matronics.com>  
  > Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2010 3:35 AM  
  > Subject: Re: Europa-List: Firewall material vs Canada "fireproof  
  > material" airworthiness requirement  
  >  
  >  
  > Bud  
  > an English 914 tri gear had his Andair mini gascolator block. The rust  
  > from an old Jerry can passed thru the Mister Funnel he always uses. The  
  > mesh of the Andair is 70micron, Mister funnel 120 micron,(check that  
  > figure) Just one more obscure gotcha.  
  > Andair told me their problem was that Rotax specify 100micron and they  
  > can only source 70.  
  > Graham  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------  
  >  
  From: Bud Yerly <budyerly@msn.com>  
  > To: europa-list@matronics.com  
  > Sent: Friday, 25 June, 2010 23:34:57  
  > Subject: Re: Europa-List: Firewall material vs Canada "fireproof  
  > material" airworthiness requirement  
  >  
  >  
  > Karl, Dave and Graham,  
  > I use a Mister Funnel and very clean Jerry Cans. Our local Florida  
  > stations have ethanol now, and as an experiment am running it full time  
  > without incident so far. Ethanol cleans the tank very well. After the  
  > third tank of gas run through preflight I filled the filter. After 1  
  > hour of flying time I noticed a slight fuel pressure drop and switched  
  > to the reserve and pressure returned. Clogged filter. Haven't had a  
  > problem since.  
  >  
  > The fuel filters stay clean, but I have noticed all but my post pump R9  
  > fuel lines (Goodyear) are smelling like a gas leak. Next oil change,  
  > all the fuel lines are coming out. It seems that the inside of the  
  > older fuel injection lines (Discount Auto Parts) are swelling a bit as  
  > well. I have noticed the inside of the drain lines sloughing off a  
  > whiteish material and am concerned. I flushed my lines with denatured  
  > alcohol before installation but did not run a small cleaning cotton  
  > through them. I have not seen water or growth in my tanks or my long  
  > sitting fuel cans.  
  >  
  > Bud  
  > ----- Original Message -----  
  >  
  From: Karl Heindl<mailto:kheindl@msn.com>  
  > To: europa-list@matronics.com<mailto:europa-list@matronics.com>  
  > Sent: Friday, June 25, 2010 11:41 AM  
  > Subject: RE: Europa-List: Firewall material vs Canada "fireproof  
  > material" airworthiness requirement  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  > Dave and Graham,  
  >  
  > I am puzzled by all this fuss about fuel contamination. Why have I  
  > never heard about a car having this problem ?  
  > I have never noticed anything more than a spec of dust in the Andair  
  > gascolator. I also buy most fuel from new gas stations where the  
  > turnover is high, and pour it through a funnel with built-in sieve.  
  > And I keep a full tank through the winter months.  
  >  
  > Karl  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  >  
  > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------  
  >  
  From: loboloda@execulink.com  
  > Subject: Re: Europa-List: Firewall material vs Canada "fireproof  
  > material" airworthiness requirement  
  > Date: Fri, 25 Jun 2010 09:42:22 -0400  
  > To: europa-list@matronics.com  
  >  
  > Hi Graham,  
  >  
  >  
  > It was a 914.  
  > We have both tried using filter funnels while fueling, however the  
  > process is painfully slow, so we are back  
  > to using fuel straight from plastic jerry cans. We use Shell premium  
  > which has been very clean, and in Ontario  
  > there is no ethanol in it  
  >  
  >  
  > Dave  
  >  
  > On 25-Jun-10, at 3:29 AM, GRAHAM SINGLETON wrote:  
  >  
  >  
  > Hi Dave  
  > most contamination gets in when fuel is added. Rust from Jerry cans  
  > is not uncommon, also algae from old fuel. You really need separate  
  > filters so that if one blocks you have a get down safely reserve.  
  > 914s tend to be more of a problem because of the high flow rate.  
  > Graham
 
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