That is a common problem and has a relatively simple fix. It happened to the 152 I learned in, my instructor told me about it and fixed it with some check valve or something like that.
I am sure someone on here will know exactly what is going on and what you need to do.
Yup. If it's gushing out, the vent check valve is stuck open. It has a small spring that holds it closed so that fuel can't gush out but can drip through the small hole in the valve as Tom says. The idea is that air can get in in a hurry if it needs to but is restricted on the outflow. If the spring breaks, or if the hinge gets gummed up with old crud, it can stick open and fuel flows freely out of it.
The valve is on the end of a short section of tubing, inside the tank, that has a jog in it. That jog is supposed to hold the valve up high in the tank. Sometimes when mechanics are servicing the vent system, they could turn that tube when they turn the outer tube nut and that puts the check valve well down in the fuel and more of it gets away.
McFarlane sells a humped vent tube to help stop the loss, but if the tanks are right full and the fuel expands it will still force fuel out.
Dan
Sometimes that original valve is working fine, but someone accidentally rotates it so that the joggle is down instead of up.
I will try to rotate it and see if that fixes the problem i would imagine a 180 rotation should fix it if that were the problem?
Yup. If it's gushing out, the vent check valve is stuck open. It has a small spring that holds it closed so that fuel can't gush out but can drip through the small hole in the valve as Tom says. The idea is that air can get in in a hurry if it needs to but is restricted on the outflow. If the spring breaks, or if the hinge gets gummed up with old crud, it can stick open and fuel flows freely out of it.
The valve is on the end of a short section of tubing, inside the tank, that has a jog in it. That jog is supposed to hold the valve up high in the tank. Sometimes when mechanics are servicing the vent system, they could turn that tube when they turn the outer tube nut and that puts the check valve well down in the fuel and more of it gets away.
McFarlane sells a humped vent tube to help stop the loss, but if the tanks are right full and the fuel expands it will still force fuel out.
Dan
I will try to rotate it and see if that fixes the problem i would imagine a 180 rotation should fix it if that were the problem?
This.AIrplane ownership can get expensive. Old airplanes bought cheap are not usually cheap unless they've had topnotch care throughout their lives. When someone asks me about buying an older airplane, I tell them to use half the money they have to buy it and the other half will pay to fix up all the neglected stuff we'll find. Too many owners have had cheap annuals for too long and the diseases accumulate.
I will try to rotate it and see if that fixes the problem i would imagine a 180 rotation should fix it if that were the problem?
This is true and the fact that so many 150/152's exhibit this problem should lead to the conclusion it is not because the vent tube or valve was at sometime installed upside down by a hapless A&P mechanic. The vast majority of these things have never been touched since they left the factory in Wichita.
The problem is the check valve. Because it is exposed to the atmosphere on one side and allows air to flow into the tank as fuel is used to equalize the pressure the fuel that is on it evaporates but the dye in the fuel doesn't. Over a period of decades it builds up and the valve no longer makes a perfect seal in it's "check" direction.
Problem is, it's not a true check valve. it has a 1/8th inch hole in the center that will allow fuel to escape when over filled...
I know but these guys aren't talking about the normal drips, they're talking about fuel pouring out which isn't normal even when topped off.
Describe "fuel pouring out" Is that 10 drops per minute? or 10 gallons?
unbeknown to many, the hole thru the tank is an eccentric hole. ( it's shaped like a "D") the valve can't reinstalled wrong with out it leaking. and that leak will not be out the vent tube.
maybe in some models but the one I took out was not a "D" but more like an "O" with flattened sides. So it could be installed upside down; 180degrees from the normal way:
I have a 152 and the overflow under the wing is gushing out fuel when I have it topped off or am taxing with a high % of fuel. Is there a problem I am not seeing?
maybe in some models but the one I took out was not a "D" but more like an "O" with flattened sides. So it could be installed upside down; 180degrees from the normal way:
Expansion is most likely what you are seeing, the solution is simple, don't put in every last drop of fuel possible on a hot day, leave a small gap at the top.