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Use separate valves if the tanks aren't vented to the same
source. For certified aircraft, any gravity-feed system that uses one valve or a valve with a "Both" position must have the tanks vented to the same source to keep tank pressures equal. Many homebuilts have problems along this line and a few have quit and crashed because the builder made mods and/or didn't understand the reasons the designer made things the way he did. Even some designs had shortcomings to start with. The original Glastar design, for instance, had a vent tube under each wingtip to feed each tank separately, and small differences in ram air pressure would cause one tank to drain before the other. If the pressure differential is large enough, the tank with lower pressure will not flow at all and the engine will quit when the other runs dry. The Cessna 150 used a single valve to control the flow from both tanks, teed together at the valve inlet, and the tanks were both connected to the single vent under the left wing. You could still get uneven flow if you flew with one wing a bit low; remember that the tanks are well apart and a slight bank will raise one above the other to cause crossflow. Check valves could stop that, but they'd have to be installed as low as possible so that the small amount of head pressure will open them, and their springs would have to be very weak. My old Auster had such check valves but still used two shutoffs because the tanks were separately vented at the caps. If I was to build another airplane I'd have shutoffs right at the tank outlets; maintenance on the system is a pain if you have to drain the tanks every time you want to fix something, and it would be nice to have them there in case of a leak lower down in the system while in flight. Dan |
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