kkendall2718
I'm New Here
I have a brand new RV-10 with 4 one hour long flights completed. The plane has a Lycoming IO-540 and I am running Dynon Skyview HDX on the panel. The first three flights all produced low fuel pressure warnings on takeoff. This is with the fuel boost pump off.
The lower limit for "red" fuel pressure was set for 15 psi and after double checking the Lycoming manual I have changed this to 14 psi. Plotting the Skyview HDX data shows a "noisy" fuel pressure signal that only begins to get noisy with the engine reaches 2600 RPMs (full throttle). The fuel pressure never drops below 14 psi. The engine purrs like a kitten throughout takeoff and the entire flight.
I am wondering if this is related to my engine driven fuel pump, a vibrating fuel line, something else? Why does it only happen at max RPM and reliably settles out once the prop is brought back?
On my most recent flight I conducted a test while stopped and verified that by turning on the fuel boost pump, the pressure stabilized back at nominal values with the boost pump. I will be employing the boost pump for takeoff/landing until I get more information.
Below is a plot from my second flight, showing the "noisy" fuel pressure signal. Note that fuel flow is shadowing the noise at the same frequency, implying to me that this is a real measured anomaly and not electrical noise on the transducer. Also note that the fuel pressure smooths out and climbs as soon as the prop is brought back to 2500 RPMs.

Any help or observations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
The lower limit for "red" fuel pressure was set for 15 psi and after double checking the Lycoming manual I have changed this to 14 psi. Plotting the Skyview HDX data shows a "noisy" fuel pressure signal that only begins to get noisy with the engine reaches 2600 RPMs (full throttle). The fuel pressure never drops below 14 psi. The engine purrs like a kitten throughout takeoff and the entire flight.
I am wondering if this is related to my engine driven fuel pump, a vibrating fuel line, something else? Why does it only happen at max RPM and reliably settles out once the prop is brought back?
On my most recent flight I conducted a test while stopped and verified that by turning on the fuel boost pump, the pressure stabilized back at nominal values with the boost pump. I will be employing the boost pump for takeoff/landing until I get more information.
Below is a plot from my second flight, showing the "noisy" fuel pressure signal. Note that fuel flow is shadowing the noise at the same frequency, implying to me that this is a real measured anomaly and not electrical noise on the transducer. Also note that the fuel pressure smooths out and climbs as soon as the prop is brought back to 2500 RPMs.

Any help or observations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks