In a previous thread, Reflex posted about excessive fuel staining around the base of his GAMI-supplied nozzles. I asked if the "A" was facing down, a standard installation step, and the response was that the rep at GAMI said it was no longer required.
Yeah, that made me curious.
Background: After shutdown, fuel in the little stainless injector lines tends to boil into vapor due to heat. The volume expansion means it has to go somewhere. It can't flow back toward the servo, so it bubbles and squirts out through the injector nozzle into the intake tract near the valve. You can usually hear it. The excess fuel is why a hot start is difficult when the pilot fails to realize it is rich.
A standard nozzle has a small air bleed hole in the side of the barrel. The "A" is stamped on a wrench flat opposite the hole. If the "A" is facing down, the bleed hole is on top, facing up, and in theory, fuel is less likely to bubble from the bleed hole and appear as a stain around the outside of the nozzle.

This AM, my daily dose of AvBrief included an advertisement for GAMIjectors. The illustration is kinda sketchy, and is obviously based on a CAD drawing of some kind. Still, what caught my attention was the pictured nozzle body had two bleed holes. I searched the web and came up with this slightly better image. However, it's a drawing, and not necessarily the real thing.
Does anyone happen to have a cutaway of a GAMIjector intended for a Lycoming application?

Yeah, that made me curious.
Background: After shutdown, fuel in the little stainless injector lines tends to boil into vapor due to heat. The volume expansion means it has to go somewhere. It can't flow back toward the servo, so it bubbles and squirts out through the injector nozzle into the intake tract near the valve. You can usually hear it. The excess fuel is why a hot start is difficult when the pilot fails to realize it is rich.
A standard nozzle has a small air bleed hole in the side of the barrel. The "A" is stamped on a wrench flat opposite the hole. If the "A" is facing down, the bleed hole is on top, facing up, and in theory, fuel is less likely to bubble from the bleed hole and appear as a stain around the outside of the nozzle.

This AM, my daily dose of AvBrief included an advertisement for GAMIjectors. The illustration is kinda sketchy, and is obviously based on a CAD drawing of some kind. Still, what caught my attention was the pictured nozzle body had two bleed holes. I searched the web and came up with this slightly better image. However, it's a drawing, and not necessarily the real thing.
Does anyone happen to have a cutaway of a GAMIjector intended for a Lycoming application?














