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  2. Having a backround in HazMat (hazardous materials) and chemistry have some of these items in your post wrong especially about ethanol. People who have no chemistry backround are wrong many times. Not all publications have scientific accuracy. Too many things now days just get passed on from one group to another.
  3. Today
  4. I posted an EASA study from 2008 on this subject. It was long in the Tooth however the Executive summary was well worth the read. It has been removed for some reason, if anybody would like the 248 page .pdf just let me know. 0% Ethanol Fuel is ideal for Aviation. No damage to fuel tanks and lines. No damage to the Carbs when left in the Aircraft for longer periods. No water as it is not Hydroscopic. Oil change interval of 50 hours due to no Lead. Not prone to Vapor Lock These are just the main advantages of 0% Ethanol Fuel. Avgas is next as it's main disadvantage when compared to 0% Ethano Fuel is, 25 hour Oil change and pumping Lead into the Enviroment. Carb Icing charts are not relevent when it comes to Mogas, 0 accuracy You are not suppose to use Mogas over 6K feet and or Temps above 25 Degree Celcius as it is prone to Vapor Lock It is Hydroscopic. A fish Head stays fresh longer, having said that we are up to 10% now.... It's horrible Fuel for anything with a Carb unless straight out of the pump fresh. Blending Fuels is a No No too. Like Forests' Chocolates, just just don't know what you got. I have Imported UL 91 from Poland to stay away from Mogas with Ethanol and Avgas with Lead. It is an expense however I flew my Aircraft for the first time in 5 months (Horrible winter) the fuel was perfect and my Engine runs like a dream
  5. I have tested my gas in the past and it was around 5% ethanol, I have not tested recently. I don't really want to run a fuel mixture because you then get all the hassles of avgas AND all the hassles of mogas, and save hardly any money on fuel. I'm only saving about 50 cents a gallon between 100LL and mogas as it is.
  6. I imagine if I had a restriction, blockage, or wrong size orifice I would have the issue with both mogas and 100LL, right?
  7. I also went to teflon fuel lines but only on the engine and engine side of the gascolator, and have no issues. You checked fuel flow but I assume only from the gascolator. That leaves the carb and fuel bypass lines in play. And you never had the issue until you changed hoses which is the only significant variable changed. I know it’s a PITA but you might want to temporarily go back to original type hoses and see if it makes a difference. Maybe the bypass orfice is an issue as that was also changed. It would certainly be an issue if wrong size or blockage.
  8. It sounds like part of the problem is winter gas blend when the temperatures warm up. The RV crowd has found you can mix in a ratio of 100LL and get protection against vaporlock, you might try 2:1 or 3:1 and see if it helps. It’s remarkably easy to test your ethanol percentage. That might help dissuade that concern. Ron’s presentation goes deep into these issues:
  9. Clear gas is easily available in Florence because of all the sand dunes. Not as cheap but less than Avgas. Try a fresh check of your area maybe someone is selling to atvs or boats. Your problem is interesting.
  10. Running 93 octane ethanol pump mogas I have been struggling with vapor issues in my CTSW for a while now, but I wanted to work through them as far as I could without asking for help. I ran this same fuel for ten years with no issues, and it came up after I changed my fuel system to include teflon-lined hoses. The symptom has been pretty consistent: intermittent power loss when the engine is hot and the deck angle is high. This means I most often saw it on takeoff and climb out, sometimes at very low altitudes (not fun!). The RPM would drop from WOT RPM (5200-5500 with the eProp) down to about 4000rpm, often surging up and down in 2-5sec pulses. Reducing throttle and deck angle usually allows me to fly at 4000-5000rpm and land. After this first happened I re-routed a fuel line to remove a potential vapor trap and the issue went away and was gone all Summer when it was hot so I assumed it was solved. Then I went to Tampa last fall to visit Bill Ince, and we were two up departing St. Petersburg and the issue happened again out over the water, two quick pulses and then it smoothed back out but we were both a little puckered up! The problem did not recur and we continued on the 15-20 miles back to Clearwater. Before I went back to Georgia I topped off with 100LL and had no issues going back home. After I got back home I went back to mogas and had no issues all winter, so I thought maybe a difference in Florida fuel blends vs Georgia could have been the cause, or just some bad gas in Florida. Carbs were rebuilt in March, and I flew until mid-April with no issues. The last few weeks it got warmer, but only in the 70s or so. Quite suddenly I started getting the vapor issue on every flight. I tried insulating all the AN connections on my fuel lines in case they were getting hot, but no joy. Finally I switched to 100% 100LL fuel and the problem ceased immediately and has been gone for several flights. I'm fine with running avgas if necessary, but I'm still a little confused over what exactly happened or changed. I checked my gascolator screen and did a fuel flow test draining out the tanks completely and there were no issues. My ideas are: 1) The new fuel lines are teflon, stainless braided, and with integral silicone firesleeve. It's possible the new lines retain more heat than rubber hoses and lead to increased chance of vaporization of ethanol. 2) Fuel blends have changed. I read that the EPA is working on changing the max ethanol in standard fuel from 10% to 15%...I'm wondering if suppliers have begun a stealth creep up of ethanol content or other additives. 3) I changed out my fuel pump when I did the hose change...perhaps my new pump is weaker than the old one? The old one was well past replacement age and was an older revision pump, but I never had this issue until after it got changed out. Maybe the new one is just a factory dud. 4) I had to make a new heat shield for my gascolator during the fuel system changes, but it's pretty much the same thickness aluminum material and the exact same shape as the old one if not slightly larger, plus it's more reflective so should bounce more heat. I guess I could beef that up or add additional insulation. Here's what it looks like: I'm certainly open to other ideas, recommendations, or wild speculation. I know Corey recommends a boost pump installation, and I'd do that if 100LL ends up not totally curing the issue, but so far so good. I miss the cheaper fuel, but it is more convenient to just pull up to the pump.
  11. Yesterday
  12. Hose job? Maybe. Rubber job? No. You are not changing the hoses. You are changing the rubber. Just for starters, that includes the fuel pump, the carburetor sockets and the engine isolators. From Rotax-Owners forum, "The Rotax 5 year rubber replacement covers all fuel, oil and coolant lines. It covers any V-belt, carburetor diaphragm and carburetor rubber intake sockets and any other air intake rubber hose or tubing. With the new maintenance manual just out the fuel pump has been added as a replacement item too."
  13. I have done hose changes without removing the engine, but not on a CT. In my opinion it will take less time to do the hose change with removing the engine. Also like Andy said you can't replace the engine isolators without removing it.
  14. You might be able to, but it's far easier to at least swing the engine away from the firewall. During a rubber change you should be changing the engine mount isolators anyway, which requires disconnecting the ring mount from the firewall mount.
  15. I have a guy here who says you can do the hose job without pulling engine?? CTSW
  16. Last week
  17. All engine hoses and rubber mounts due 9/2027. Aircraft was damaged about 13 yrs ago with no structural damage. Was repaired properly by Airtime Aviation.
  18. Has the 5 year rubber been done? Any damage history? Thanks, Hayden 661-269-1999
  19. My wife said we need to take the dog in the plane. I told her I'll take the dog and she can drive, didn't go well. So I have to buy a different plane. Dual GDU 470 G3X Dual GSU 25C ADAHRS Garmin 507 autopilot control Garmin GSA28 servos Garmin GTR 200 com GTX 327 transponder GDL 50R ADSB in Uavionix tailbeacon ADSB out Vg's installed that completely eliminate stall in prolonged flare when landing. Real landing light, Tundra landing gear with Matco wheels and brakes, new 321 stainless exhaust system, Rosen sun visors. V20 E- Prop Parachute and rocket due 2030 Condition inspection due 4/2025 tt airframe and engine 872 hours. Engine hoses due 9/2027 Much more, no shortcuts done on this plane. 75K, no tire kickers please
  20. On my 2006 CTsw, that knob has a female threaded hole that screws onto a threaded metal post on the headrest. When the knob is unscrewed fully, it will separate from the threaded post and the headrest can then be removed from (or, more precisely, fall off of) the seat.
  21. add /klax to windy.com I use https://windy.com/k6s2 6s2 is the identifier where I'm based. I see local surface winds and the automated weather including vfr/mvfr/ifr/lifr
  22. I won't be at the airport for a while, but I was looking at the CTLS Parts and Assembly Manual and it shows the headrest is adjustable by using the "Fixator"? I assume this is a knob that can be loosened to move the headrest up and down. Can one unscrew this "Fixator" and remove the headrest? I'm pondering camera locations, and thought about mounting an Insta360 to get 360 video from the passenger's perspective during flight. My two options that I had thought about before looking at the P&A Manual were to mount to the spar carry-through with a suction mount of some sort that drops down, or make a mount that conforms to the seat. If the headrest is easily removable, it'd be easy to make a mount that goes where the headrest is. Anyone done this? Mark
  23. Thanks, Guys. I put Windy on my computer and phone and am figuring out how to get the most out of it. Once I have that down I'll start on the other two to get them down also. Mark
  24. Earlier
  25. For surface, what Tom posted. For various altitudes up to 24 hours out https://aviationweather.gov/gfa/#winds
  26. The autopilot is a TruTrak Digiflight 2 vs, with the CT pilot face plate. I found the manual on the Bendix king website. 8300-008-DigiFlight-II-Series-Autopilot-Installation-Manual.pdf
  27. Here's a version that may or may not be correct for your vintage head unit. There have been some pin location changes for power input, among other aspects - so use caution. Vizion Installation Manual.pdf
  28. Your Dynon is an autopilot as well you know. I think your AP is orphaned and I don't see a manual online. My CT Pilot lost its display and I upgraded the servos to dynons and replaced the CT Pilot with a Dyno AP74.
  29. Look on line, you should be able to find it
  30. Thank you all for the fast replies. I will forward to my A&P. Bob
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