Usage Statistics for daviddfriedman.com Summary Period: September 2013 - Referrer Generated 01-Oct-2013 03:15 EDT. Primer (paint), a coating applied to a surface to prepare it for paint or another coating or adhesive Primer (cosmetics), a cream or lotion applied before another to improve coverage and persistence Primer (gasoline engine), a device on some petrol engines used to prime the engine with gasoline before starting it Primer (molecular biology), a nucleic acid strand (or related molecule) that.
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I have the traditional 'Essex' type pump primer, and I suspect it's leaking fuel into the #1 cylinder (I only have the primer line plumbed into the #1). Aleksandra ruda seriya rodovoj kinzhal 3 0. The symptoms are: #1 CHT and EGT are both slightly low. The EGT is 100 deg lower and the CHT is 20 deg lower than the other cylinders on climbout.
When I prime before startup, the primer is 'flat' and takes several pumps until the primer has fuel in it. The spring seems to be OK since I have to push against it to lock the plunger. It sure seems like the outlet valve is leaking through. I changed the O-rings but the 'rebuild' kits don't include the seal on the end of the plunger. Does anybody have any advice, please? I would imagine that the primer pump is in a position with it's height above the tank and assume it is upstream of the mech fuel pump.
I don't see how fuel could flow against gravity to get to the primer pump and flow to the cylinder. If the pump is sitting below the fuel line on the suction side of the fuel pump, it is possible that gravity will allow it to flow to the pump. However, only gravity can get it to the cylinder. If any part if the line between the primer pump and the nozzle is above the the primer pump, the fuel cannot flow without assistance. I have a.01 GPH Gami spread and the spread from my lowest to highest EGT at cruise is about 70-80* (this has more to do with placement of the sensor relative to the exhaust valve).
My CHT spread is about 20* from hottest to coldest and my #1 is the coldest. In the RV, I would expect the #1 cylinder to be the coolest. Assuming the primer pump is not being fed from a pressurized line, I don't see how that circuit could flow enough fuel to make a meaningfull difference in the total flow to that cylinder at cruise. That pump should have two check valves. The fact that one is bad (intake), doesn't mean the other (outflow) is, though it is a decent possibility.
In order for fuel to flow through freely, both check valves would have to be bad. Further, I would also expect the design to prohibit flow when in the locked position, but have never seen a design diagram for one of these. This is a safety issue that I can't imagine was overlooked in the design of a TSO'ed part. EDIT: I just looked a picture of one of these primers.