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Could it be possible that the cabin roof vent from the tail has an
opening to the empennage and that pressurizes the empennage when you close the flapper to the overhead outlets? There would also have to be something blocking the wall grille on the left side of the cabin. The impact air at cruise may be at high enough volume and pressure to overwhelm the belly exit vent and the residual volume flows backward into the cabin via the right wall grille. Just a thought based on what I've seen in this thread so far. -----Original Message----- From: Roy N5804F ] Posted At: Tuesday, January 16, 2007 6:28 PM Posted To: rec.aviation.owning Conversation: Piper Archer II Air Leak Problem by Back Seat. Subject: Piper Archer II Air Leak Problem by Back Seat. Good point there Jim, Unfortunately both of the fine mesh vents in the rear seat plank are not connected to ducts at all. They just vent cabin air to the area under the seat plank and from there the stale air should vent via the central belly hole. But you may have hit on a point. Although the vents are not ducted I will check if I can see how the air might flow under the plank. Thanks Roy "Jim" wrote in message ... Does anybody know the shape of the connection where the left and right sides join before exiting the outlet? "T"? "Y"? Could it be shaped so that the rushing air escaping from the left side is creating a low pressure area inside the tube on the right side causing air to enter the exit port and flow into the right side? Like a shallow well pump forces some water down the well through a venturi to force more water up the well. What happens if you put some duct tape over the outlet opening on the bottom of the plane? Jim "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... The outboard floor vents are connected to the wing root openings. The heater vents run along the center tunnel between the seats. The overhead vents connect to the vertical stabilizer opening with the blower in between. Yep, but he's not talking about ANY of those vents. There is a fine grating piece that fits alongside the rear seats, between the seat and the outer wall of this model of Cherokee. This grating allows air to flow freely the cabin and the under-seat compartment (where the battery is on some Cherokees), and then out a hole in the bottom of the plane. Think "flow-through ventilation", circa Pontiac 1968. That hole has a shroud around it that makes it act like a venturi in flight, actually SUCKING the air through those mesh grates, and out the bottom of the plane. For some reason, the OP is getting air coming OUT of that grating -- only on the right side -- which is seemingly impossible. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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