Yes, the heaters is often located so that screens and fuel
control units are heated well above the freezing point of
water or the solidification point of JetA.
"Al G" wrote in message
...
|
| "Allen" wrote in message
| t...
|
| "Al G" wrote in message
| ...
|
| "Peter" wrote in message
| ...
|
| "John R. Copeland"
wrote:
|
| Cold avgas should be no problem, assuming no suspended
ice crystals.
| Take care to keep your fuel clean and dry.
| I often fly in the low flight levels where
temperatures can be even
| lower.
| The cold-soaked fuel flows just fine, including using
a transfer pump to
| move wing-locker fuel out into the tip tanks.
| I've never had any avgas problems at those
temperatures,
| but cranking the starter against very cold oil has
defeated me too many
| times.
| Heated hangars are my favorite choice.
|
| This is Europe, where heated hangars are a luxury
available to the
| chosen few

|
| The specific concern wasn't the stuff flowing into the
tank. It is
| freezing in the pipework, especially in the injection
tubes (IO540-C4
| engine, in my case) which are very thin and exposed to
the full 150kt
| airstream.
|
| There have been various cases of avgas freezing in
fuel pipes, and the
| pilot having to descend all the way down to god knows
where to restart
| the engine(s). And it's happened to twins too; one
pilot I met
| recently had to descend (a Duchess) with a dual engine
failure from
| 25,000ft to 2,000ft over the sea, 100nm away from any
coast, before he
| could restart. The initial temp was -25C.
|
| I've had the "Twin glider syndrome" in a C-340.
South of Klamath
| Falls, Or., at FL 220, -30C, The fuel flow for the left
one started to
| twitch, and whithin 3 minutes, the engine quit. The
right one followed
| about 5 later. Tops were about 20,000, and the 340
wouldn't stay on top,
| because I had picked up a little ice, so after one quit
I had to descend.
| I got the right one lit at about 8,000, say 2500 agl,
and right after
| breaking out VFR. After landing in Reno, a quick drain
of the tip tanks,
| showed hundreds of tiny ice crystals. The sample look
like one of those
| "Snow scenes" that you shake up and watch the white
stuff settle. Yes, I
| had drained all of the sumps prior to takeoff. No, I
didn't find any
| liquid water, but it was -2C in the hangar during
preflight. The fuel
| truck checked out as well. Even after fueling in
Tuscon, warm and dry, I
| still had "snow" in the sample the next day. While in
Reno, we sprayed a
| little avgas prist into the tank, and immediately
drained out almost a
| cup of water. After doing this to all tanks, the
mechanic said I was good
| to go, and I left, with no more problems.
|
| Prist = Good
|
| Prist before the engine(s) quit=Better
|
| It does appear that "Pucker factor" on the pilots seat
can extend your
| glide. I think we are not counting all available
sources of lift.
|
| Al G
|
| Some of the later model Cessna 340/A, 414/A and 421C had
"heated" fuel
| manifolds. The manifold (or spider) has a reservoir at
the bottom that
| hot engine oil flows through to prevent this.
|
| Allen
| The mechanic told me that ice crystals had blocked the
fuel filter.
| Would this heater have helped that?
|
| Al G
|
|