Storm --
I concur with the others that the tank is too low in relation to the
carb. However, I'm also aware that you realistically cannot raise the tank
on the Twist. Talking to one of our resident experts at the field today,
he
said his fix was to rotate the engine sidewise; i.e., the cylinder on the
right side on the model.
Ideally, the tank center line should be at or no more than 1/2" below
the carb spraybar.
If you still prefer to keep your original set up, an alternate
solution
is to add a Perry Pump in the fuel system.
Cheers -- \_________Lyman Slack________/
\_______Flying Gators R/C___/
\_____AMA 6430 LM____ /
\___Gainesville FL_____/
Visit my Web Site at www.LymanSlack.com
"On so-called global warming or climate change, let us not scare ourselves
with catastrophic forecasts, or use them to defend and promote irrational
interventions in human lives."
"Stormlord" <Stormlord.3bncon@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:Stormlord.3bncon@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I have a fairly new (less than a year old) OS .61FX mounted upright in a
> Twist 3D 60 with a 13x6 prop. The engine has been properly broke in and
> has about 20 flights on it.
> I'm having a problem that I'm not sure how to solve.
> When flying the plane at around 1/4 throttle, if I fly inverted, it
> will die and I have to dead-stick the plane to the ground.
> It doesn't seem to happen when I do this at 3/4 or higher throttle, but
> it does stutter from time to time, it just doesn't quit.
> I never have a problem whatsoever if I don't fly inverted ... runs
> through a tank of fuel just fine and I can do anything I want with the
> plane.
>
> At first, I thought the clunk was getting stuck and sucking air, but
> this is not the case.
> The clunk is free and not getting hung up anywhere ... also, when the
> plane lands dead-stick, upon inspection, there is fuel in the fuel line
> all the way to the carb with no air bubbles in it.
>
> Is there a way to correct this problem? Anyone ever had this happen
> before? I'm not sure where to start, I've never had this issue
> previously.
>
> I've tried leaning and richening the engine with the main needle valve
> (no difference - the problem is repeatable), and I've changed to a
> hotter glow plug (from an OS 8 to a 3) so far.
>
> I'm just not sure what's causing the condition, so I'm not sure what to
> try to fix it.
>
> Could the engine be flooding itself upside down somehow, causing the
> glow plug to foul out? What would cause that and how can it be
> corrected?
>
> I pulled the glow plug after one of the dead-stick landings and it was
> not wet, but with a hot engine, I thought maybe it had eva****ated after
> normal level flight had resumed (even though the engine was not
> running).
>
> Just not sure where to go with this and I'm searching for some ideas to
> try ....
>
>
> --
> Stormlord
> I have a fairly new (less than a year old) OS .61FX mounted upright in a
> Twist 3D 60 with a 13x6 prop. The engine has been properly broke in and
> has about 20 flights on it.
> I'm having a problem that I'm not sure how to solve.
> When flying the plane at around 1/4 throttle, if I fly inverted, it
> will die and I have to dead-stick the plane to the ground.
> It doesn't seem to happen when I do this at 3/4 or higher throttle, but
> it does stutter from time to time, it just doesn't quit.
> I never have a problem whatsoever if I don't fly inverted ... runs
> through a tank of fuel just fine and I can do anything I want with the
> plane.
>
> At first, I thought the clunk was getting stuck and sucking air, but
> this is not the case.
> The clunk is free and not getting hung up anywhere ... also, when the
> plane lands dead-stick, upon inspection, there is fuel in the fuel line
> all the way to the carb with no air bubbles in it.
>
> Is there a way to correct this problem? Anyone ever had this happen
> before? I'm not sure where to start, I've never had this issue
> previously.
>
> I've tried leaning and richening the engine with the main needle valve
> (no difference - the problem is repeatable), and I've changed to a
> hotter glow plug (from an OS 8 to a 3) so far.
>
> I'm just not sure what's causing the condition, so I'm not sure what to
> try to fix it.
>
> Could the engine be flooding itself upside down somehow, causing the
> glow plug to foul out? What would cause that and how can it be
> corrected?
>
> I pulled the glow plug after one of the dead-stick landings and it was
> not wet, but with a hot engine, I thought maybe it had eva****ated after
> normal level flight had resumed (even though the engine was not
> running).
>
> Just not sure where to go with this and I'm searching for some ideas to
> try ....
>
>
> --
> Stormlord
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Stormlord's Profile: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/member.php?u=65667
> View this thread: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=885514
>


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