Quote:
Originally Posted by ArjanPlomp
Judging the fact that over 250 people read this post, but no one replied, it must have been obvious? What how obvious? I still don't have a clue....
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IF the fuel system is fuel injection, what happened would appear to be normal. (What follows is a explanation of what MAY have occurred but there are no guarantees it is the answer.)
The flow divider area heats up during a long taxi, fuel flow to the injectors is low resulting in some fuel vaporization in the lines. This causes rough running. When flow is increased by idling at 1200-1400 rpm, fuel stays cool enough through the area to prevent vaporization. In flight, the area is cooled most adequately so it is not a problem, plus fuel flow is relatively high.
If the primary fuel delivery line before the mechanical pump is in an unprotected area and/or near an exhaust pipe, vaporization may be occurring in that area. In that case, the electric pump will help prevent it. But I don't think that is what is going on here.
The electric pump won't help much in the flow divider area. That area is under 1-3 psi fuel pressure coming from the controller no matter what. Before the controller, pressure is in the 20-30 psi range and vaporization should not occur.
Remember, fuel will vaporize when not under pressure somewhere around 110F. At 1-3 psi, that temperature is somewhat higher but not by much. That's why the engine runs rough on the ground after a lengthy delay.
I have these symptoms after a quick turn with a heat soaked engine. It is not a big deal. Opening the oil check door after shut down helps to cool the area around the flow divider and sometimes it is enough so it does not run rough before take off. Depends a lot on OAT also.