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pipertommy
8th Jul 2014, 20:56
After an engine power loss in our C150, a possible cause of the problem put forward is fuel not reaching the engine due to rear shift of fuel in the tanks during a touch & go with high nose attitude / acceleration?
The aircraft was ending its circuit practice and had 18 Ltrs onboard.
Any opinions?? Apparently 1/4 in each tank is minimum for slipping and running take off's ??

Mach Jump
8th Jul 2014, 21:18
The unusable fuel in a Cessna 150 is 15 litres, so I guess the theory put forward is probably correct, as you were on the edge of running out of fuel altogether!


MJ:ok:

pipertommy
8th Jul 2014, 21:54
The dip stick takes into account for unusable. ��

Mach Jump
8th Jul 2014, 22:12
Then I think the theory put forward is unlikely, as 18 litres of useable fuel is almost 1/4 tanks. More likely to be carb icing, or a fouled spark plug. Did the engine cut completely, or just misfire?


MJ:ok:

Pilot DAR
9th Jul 2014, 01:42
fuel not reaching the engine due to rear shift of fuel in the tanks during a touch & go with high nose attitude / acceleration?

Nah. Unless you were just about out of fuel, this was not the cause in a serviceable system. I have many hours in my 150 doing horrible nose up attitudes (it has a STOL cuff on the wing). I have never had a burp form doing that.

A fouled plug will cause roughness, but not a noticeable power loss at a higher power setting, unless both in that cylinder are fouled.

Depending upon the symptoms, and time in service for the cylinders, you might have had a sticky exhaust valve, I've had a few of those, and the engine seems terrible at about 2000 RPM, but it will keep running, unless you stick two, then you are going down (or are very glad you are down!).

Ask the maintainer for a good discussion about sticking valves, this is what to watch for (presuming you're carrying enough fuel).

Big Pistons Forever
9th Jul 2014, 02:34
The aircraft was ending its circuit practice and had 18 Ltrs onboard.


How did you know it had 18 litres and did you dip the tanks when you landed ?

ChickenHouse
9th Jul 2014, 03:11
Very unlikely. C150/152/172 are not that unsafe on low tanks. When flying Africa the boys usually flew them down to 5-10 Liters remaining and their nose was most probably at angles you never see in Europe ... My best guess for such an occurence would be a sticky valve - not uncommon for O200.

pipertommy
9th Jul 2014, 05:27
Thanks for the replies. It was a complete cut after rotation. Engineers are investigating today.

A and C
9th Jul 2014, 12:14
The 150 & 152 have feed pipes at both the front and rear of the fuel tanks so under normal conditions aircraft attitude will not be a factor in fuel feed.

Pilot DAR
9th Jul 2014, 13:46
The 150 & 152 have feed pipes at both the front and rear of the fuel tanks so under normal conditions aircraft attitude will not be a factor in fuel feed.

This is the case for the Aerobats.

I cannot speak to the 152's (though I don't think they have two outlets per tank).

The 150's have one outlet per tank. But, that said, unporting it during co-ordinated flight with any safe amount of fuel would be very difficult to do.

I would be very surprised to hear that a fuel issue caused an engine stoppage, when adequate fuel was being carried in a 150.

I'm not clear from the OP, was this a total stop of the engine? Or a momentary "burp" and restart without pilot action? Or could the engine have momentarily lost enough power that it seemed to stop, but was really running the whole time?

IFMU
9th Jul 2014, 16:00
The Cessna 140 has ports in the rear of the tank. The tanks in a Cessna are high enough that I don't think you can run out of head pressure in any climb attitude. A light Pawnee with a cowl tank will quit due to fuel during a power on stall.

irish seaplane
10th Jul 2014, 22:32
Only one tank outlet in a C150. There are two in a C152 one at each end of the inboard side of the tank. Extreme attitudes and less than X litres of fuel causes an issue. The POH is not the last word on the matter. I have a C150 tank out at the moment and going to conduct a home test to see what X litres is that would cause unporting in a zero bank climb or descent. I'm in no rush to do it but its a useful exercise. Once you hold the tank in your hand you can see how it can happen.

pipertommy
10th Jul 2014, 23:01
It appears the cause was low fuel. Now resolved ��

glendalegoon
10th Jul 2014, 23:26
So, what the HECK were you doing with such a low fuel level?

Even after 1 hour of flying, you should have had plenty of fuel if you took off with enough.

Jude098
11th Jul 2014, 10:05
Funny thing similar thing happened yesterday to me at Wellesbourne.
Left Kemble with full tanks, 2 POB, in a C150 aerobat.
Landed at Wellesbourne, had tea and cake and a couple of hours later checked over aircraft..... plenty of fuel for trip home.... started no probs, taxied off grass and tested the brakes...all good... asked P2 to test brakes...he pulled the power and as braked engine cut off. Weird.
Started again with no probs and no probs on way home... though did keep a look out for suitable fields

pipertommy
11th Jul 2014, 11:43
Our incident has been traced to an incorrect dip stick !

Piper.Classique
11th Jul 2014, 14:57
Jude 098, what were the temperature and dewpoint, and was the grass wet?

Mach Jump
11th Jul 2014, 17:18
Our incident has been traced to an incorrect dip stick !

Lucky escape then.:)

...what were the temperature and dewpoint, and was the grass wet

Just what I was thinking. ;)


MJ:ok:

Armchairflyer
11th Jul 2014, 20:29
Enlighten me, please (wrt the wet grass temp/dewpoint thing), merci d'avance :)

Sir George Cayley
11th Jul 2014, 20:38
an incorrect dip stick

OK just their name.......;:ooh:

SGC

slam525i
11th Jul 2014, 20:49
Enlighten me, please (wrt the wet grass temp/dewpoint thing), merci d'avance :)

They're probably thinking carb ice. The wet grass is a sign of the dewpoint spread.

Mach Jump
11th Jul 2014, 21:22
They're probably thinking carb ice. ...

Yes. The Continental engine in the C150, esp. the O-240 fitted to some of the Aerobats is notorious for icing up whilst taxying over wet grass.


MJ:ok:

Armchairflyer
11th Jul 2014, 23:14
Thanks for the enlightenment :)

Pilot DAR
12th Jul 2014, 00:08
The O-200 gets a bad rap for carb ice, which I think is undeserved. Though I have had carb ice in them, it has been no worse than any other engine type. In conditions which are conducive, I'll use carb heat. Otherwise, I never touch it. Carb ice is not a reason for an engine to go from full power to no power suddenly. And, if you have managed to actually get the engine to quit because of carb ice, start looking for a place for a forced landing, 'cause it's too late for carb heat to do any good!

The ice which has caused me instant full engine failures (twice on O-200, and once on O-470) was ice crystals in the gas, because I had not used alcohol in the fuel to dissolve them out. That is just totally random, though an application of full power increases the odds.

The fuel quantity problem is really the focal point of a sudden engine failure in a 150, they are otherwise pretty well bullet proof. I noted the remark of "incorrect dipstick". With due respect, if it is long enough to touch the bottom of the tank, while still emerging from the top, it's the right dipstick. I am not aware of any formally approved dipstick, or marked dimensions for one for any Cessna (other type do have them). So if you're relying on markings of unapproved origin on a home made dipstick, you're playing with fire. I have seen commercially available after market ones for Cessnas, an my experience has been that if you are using the one made for the aircraft model and tank configuration, they are pretty good, but they are still not "approved", leaving the user of the dipstick responsible for the determination of quantity.

If you have anything stuck into the tank, which will touch bottom, and show a wet mark, good for you. Put your thumb and fore finger at the place where it enters the tank filler, and pull it out. If the wet spot is less than a quarter of that distance, buy some fuel before you fly, and buy more accordingly for your planned flight. Anything more complicated than that may be leading you down the garden path, and to a forced landing....

Big Pistons Forever
12th Jul 2014, 05:11
The fuel quantity problem is really the focal point of a sudden engine failure in a 150, they are otherwise pretty well bullet proof. I noted the remark of "incorrect dipstick".

If you have anything stuck into the tank, which will touch bottom, and show a wet mark, good for you. Put your thumb and fore finger at the place where it enters the tank filler, and pull it out. If the wet spot is less than a quarter of that distance, buy some fuel before you fly, and buy more accordingly for your planned flight. Anything more complicated than that may be leading you down the garden path, and to a forced landing....

Absolutely !

It appears the OP was lucky to get away with flying with insufficient fuel and his lesson is a good one to hoist in for every pilot.....

thing
12th Jul 2014, 12:04
I find the after market dippers for the 152/172 to be pessimistic (which is good). I flew a 152 back from somewhere yesterday and dipping the tanks before take off gave me 4 galls per side or 30 litres. I put 40 in before take off and then another 29 to full when I got back. I probably burned around 20 litres on the trip so taking into account unusable fuel it was around 13 litres out on usable fuel when I initially dipped it.

Piper.Classique
12th Jul 2014, 19:51
I was indeed thinking carb ice, not for the OP, the one at Wellesborne. Taxi-ing on wet grass will get most engines a good dose of ice in humid air, and at low ( one hopes ) RPM. I have had this with an O-320, and more than once with a Limbach ( aka Volkswagen ) in an SF 25. Now that one is REALLY known for icing up. :-)

150 Driver
12th Jul 2014, 23:23
Early in my training my instructor was demonstrating touch and goes in a 150.

Wheels on ground, flaps retracted, throttle straight forward, only to completely lose the engine.

Once we'd coasted to a halt it fired straightaway so not icing, he concluded it was a full rich cut, the first he'd seen in 30 years. We were around 3/4 full tanks and the rest of the lesson was fine

Ever since I've been a bit gentle on advancing to full throttle

Don't know whether facts could be similar ?

slam525i
13th Jul 2014, 02:56
Wheels on ground, flaps retracted, throttle straight forward, only to completely lose the engine.

Once we'd coasted to a halt it fired straightaway so not icing, he concluded it was a full rich cut, the first he'd seen in 30 years. We were around 3/4 full tanks and the rest of the lesson was fine

Ever since I've been a bit gentle on advancing to full throttle

In my (very limited) experience with (Lycoming) Cessnas and their acceleration pumps, you can make it stumble, but once the extra fuel goes through the engine, it'll roar back to life. I find it a little odd, regardless of engine maker, that it came to a complete stop due to accelerator pump over-rich.

On the other hand, carb ice melts remarkably quickly in a hot cowl with the engine stopped. Especially with Continentals with the carb attached to the sump.

But I have almost no time and I am probably wrong.

Pilot DAR
13th Jul 2014, 06:42
If the accelerator pump is U/S, and the pilot jams the throttle open, you can make it quit, but it will do so the instant that the throttle is opened, if it's going to. If you have made an engine quit with rapid application of the throttle, the engine handling is verging on abusive, and the accelerator pump needs maintenance (unless it is one of the rare engines which does not have one).

Jude098
13th Jul 2014, 13:10
Grass was dry and piece of paper I jotted down temps is somewhere in the bin.


a/c had been sitting on the grass a couple of hours in outside temp of 24+C. 10ft taxy from grass to hard taxiway.


Wasn't taking any chances and on powercheck left the carb on for a couple of minutes.... just in case.Don't know why just gut feeling maybe

dubbleyew eight
14th Jul 2014, 06:44
vun fifty driva.
on the marvel schebler carby there is an accelerator pump.
in the linkage is a little triangular plate with 3 holes in it. the holes have different distances between them.
when you push in the throttle the little pump gives a squirt of fuel up into the manifold. how much of a squirt depends which way around the little intervening triangle is positioned.

if the little triangle is set up wrong you will probably get too much of a squirt.

the other option giving not enough squirt would probably be picked up straight away when the carby was being worked on.
too much of a squirt is subtle though. you really only see the way over rich mixture cut out when you push the throttle in suddenly. push it in gently and the engine may flag a little but will keep on running.

I know about this because I encountered it when I reconditioned my carby.
I eventually got it completely right.

I'd suggest that the carby may not be set up quite right. easy circumvention is to just gently increase the power each time. don't slam it to full throttle.

Armchairflyer
15th Jul 2014, 16:36
easy circumvention is to just gently increase the power each time. don't slam it to full throttleThink I read somewhere that aircraft engines generally do not like abrupt power changes too much, e.g., compared to most car engines. In any case, since then 1-2 seconds is the minimum time I take for going from idle to full power or v/v.