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		Ralph B
 
  
  Joined: 14 Apr 2007 Posts: 367 Location: Mound Minnesota
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				 Posted: Fri Dec 04, 2009 8:33 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				Guys,
 
 My 912 is low on oil occasionally and it's not because the engine is burning it. It's being sucked out of the vent tube. This tube runs down alongside the bottom of the engine and exits in front of the prop. I find evidence of oil on the prop if I fill the oil to the marks on the dipstick.
 
 Is there a better way of venting the oil canister?
 
 The tube is flat on the bottom and Mark German (builder) thinks the venturi effect is sucking out the oil. He told me to file the vent tube at about a 45 deg angle so it would have an opening towards the front. Then it will have a positive pressure instead of a negative one.
 
 What kind of oil canister venting do some of you guys have on your 912's?
 
 Ralph B
 
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  _________________ Ralph B
 
 
Kolb Kolbra 912uls
 
N20386
 
550 hours | 
			 
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		rlaird
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 373 Location: Houston
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				 Posted: Fri Dec 04, 2009 8:44 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				My tube runs all the way down to near the bottom of a leg.  No issues with it.  I'd have to double-check, but I think it curves just a tiny bit, away from the leg, toward the back... the tube is behind the leg, thus out of the airstream. 
 
 On Fri, Dec 4, 2009 at 10:33 AM, Ralph B <ul15(at)juno.com (ul15(at)juno.com)> wrote:
 [quote] --> Kolb-List message posted by: "Ralph B" <ul15(at)juno.com (ul15(at)juno.com)>
  
  Guys,
  
  My 912 is low on oil occasionally and it's not because the engine is burning it. It's being sucked out of the vent tube. This tube runs down alongside the bottom of the engine and exits in front of the prop. I find evidence of oil on the prop if I fill the oil to the marks on the dipstick.
   
  Is there a better way of venting the oil canister?
  
  The tube is flat on the bottom and Mark German (builder) thinks the venturi effect is sucking out the oil. He told me to file the vent tube at about a 45 deg angle so it would have an opening towards the front. Then it will have a positive pressure instead of a negative one.
   
  What kind of oil canister venting do some of you guys have on your 912's?
  
 
  [b]
 
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  _________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Robert Laird
 
formerly: MkIIIc w/ 912ULS  &  Gyrobee
 
current:  Autogyro Cavalon w/ 914ULS
 
Houston, TX area
 
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		by0ung(at)brigham.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri Dec 04, 2009 11:44 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				The tube is flat on the bottom and Mark German (builder) thinks the venturi
 effect is sucking out the oil. He told me to file the vent tube at about a
 45 deg angle so it would have an opening towards the front. Then it will
 have a positive pressure instead of a negative one.
 
 What kind of oil canister venting do some of you guys have on your 912's?
 
 Ralph B
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
 
 | 	  
 I don't think that will make any difference....   the blow by gasses that
 force the oil from the crankcase to the oil tank are vented out the tube.
 There is always a positive pressure on it.
 
    If  you ran the hose into a small plastic bottle, then created a vent
 tube that was about 1/3 down from the top.  The plastic bottle would trap
 the oil. And would have to be emptied every now and then.  With the new vent
 not being at the top would keep the oil contained if you went into a
 negative g condition.
 
 As for me I just wipe off the prop.
 Boyd Young
 MKIII
 
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		ronlee
 
 
  Joined: 25 Dec 2006 Posts: 141
 
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				 Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2009 5:25 am    Post subject: Re: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				My 912 oil vent tube goes into a plastic bottle filled with a brass scrubber pad. the vent tube end is about an inch from the bottom of the bottle. A bit of oil will collect in the bottle which I then suck or dump out. Never any oil on the bottom of the plane. This is simple, cheap and works well
 
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Tucson, Arizona | 
			 
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		NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2009 8:23 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				They make a after market breather kit for VWs (you would find it in a dune 
 buggy catalog) for less than $30 that I have one installed on my engine. The 
 breather box is a small foam filled vented aluminum box with ports for two 
 valve covers and the main VW breather three total. The ports are installed 
 low in the box so that any captured oil will drain back into the engine. The 
 breather requires no maintenance and keeps oil off my tail feathers.
 
 The engine still leaks a very small amount of oil but it doesn't come from 
 the breather like before. Great Planes aircraft and Valley Engineering (my 
 redrive manufacturer) both have oil separators that I have tried but didn't 
 work.
 
 Rick Neilsen
 Redrive VW powered MKIIIC
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2009 8:53 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				> They make a after market breather kit for VWs (you would find it in a 
 dune
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   buggy catalog) for less than $30 that I have one installed on my engine.
  Rick Neilsen
 
 | 	  
 Rick N/Gang:
 
 I was surprised to learn, after putting a few hours on my first 912 in 1994, 
 that a lot of waste from the combustion process is dumped out the oil tank 
 vent tube.  This stuff is nearly clear and looks, feels, and smells like a 
 solvent.  Also, any condensation in the engine is dumped out the vent tube.
 
 I don't want to restrict this vent to keep my airplane tidy.  Therefore, 
 you'll usually find oil/solvent residue on my prop blades, radiator/oil 
 cooler.
 
 One way to keep the airplane cleaner is not overfill the oil tank.  Burp the 
 crankcase by following the procedure described in the owners manual to 
 insure the oil level is correct.  If I overfill, which I routinely do, the 
 first negative G situation I get into pushes oil to the top of the oil tank 
 where crankcase pressure  promptly pushes it into the vent tube.  That 
 really makes a mess.
 
 Normally, it is not a problem if I don't overfill.
 
 john h
 mkIII -  Cold and grey at hauck's holler, alabama.
 
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  _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2009 8:58 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				John
 
 Agreed it is best not to restrict the gases that get vented by any breather 
 system but if you can separate the gas from the oil mist that does come out 
 of my VW it is a good thing. The very low cost breather/oil separator that I 
 use works very well and allows enough volume of air movement that oil 
 doesn't find a way out in other areas that had plagued my older VW engines. 
 Remember there are others putting VWs on Kolbs.
 
 On my direct drive VW I had a long tube that vented this oil mist out the 
 bottom of the cage along with a lot of nasty looking stuff that would drip 
 out back in the hanger. I found that adding the long tube the same size as 
 the breather line tended to restrict the breathing enough that oil would 
 find its way out of the engine in other areas. Later I removed the long 
 breather tube and found my oil consumption reduced a bit but my tail 
 feathers were still well oiled.
 
 I assumed that the high priced Rotax 912 series engines would have solved 
 this issue and maybe they have by keeping the oil level lower. I was just 
 surprised to hear others comment about this issue with their 912s.
 
 Rick Neilsen
 Redrive VW Powered MKIIIC
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2009 9:26 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				> I assumed that the high priced Rotax 912 series engines would have solved
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   this issue and maybe they have by keeping the oil level lower. I was just 
  surprised to hear others comment about this issue with their 912s.
 
  Rick Neilsen
 
 | 	  
 Rick N/Gang:
 
 Not really an issue for our "high priced" Rotax 912 engines.
 
 This solvent looking/smelling fluid needs to be flushed out of the system, 
 and that is what is happening.  It is not that much, a few drops now and 
 then.
 
 The only time I get oil out of the "oil tank" vent line is when I 
 accidentally overfill the oil tank during oil changes, and/or experience a 
 severe down draft or a hard landing.
 
 We use a dry sump crankcase on our engines.  Oil is returned to the oil tank 
 from the crankcase by blowby pressure which is 3 to 5 psi.  This also allows 
 the engine to purge itself of contaminents during this process.  I never 
 realized how much blow by there was in an internal combustion engine until I 
 went through the Rotax Factory 912 School.
 
 A few years ago, Rotax changed the oil tank dip stick operating range.  The 
 low and high level marks were raised to increase oil capacity.  I think this 
 may aggrevate the problem of negative G's and  oil blown out the vent line.
 
 If folks are concerned about oil getting on their airplanes, I think the 
 vent line catch bottle is a good idea.  I don't use one because that is just 
 one more thing to pay attention to.
 
 Rotax probably could spend a lot of money to develope a new oil tank with 
 new innards to prevent this from happening, but I don't think it would be 
 worth the money.
 
 I'm not whining about the problem because it only happens when I goof up and 
 overfill or get in some pretty violent weather.
 
 An added tidbit:  My old Dodge/Cummins engine is a 1992 model.  I uses the 
 old fashioned method of venting crankcase to the atmosphere.  During 
 operation on the highway it is venting gases and solvents to the atmosphere, 
 just like the 912.  After a long hard pull, the Cummins will drip oil and 
 solvents from the crankcase vent tube.
 
 Guess Rotax could go to a closed crankcase system, but then the little 
 engine would have to eat all that crud in order to get rid of it.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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  _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		John Bickham
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 170 Location: St. Francisville, LA
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 5:21 am    Post subject: Re: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				Just wanted to add this one for consideration....
 
 John H pointed this out to me on our trip out west in May.  Play with the location and direction of your vent hose.  Originally, the last foot of mine was horizontal and terminated within about 6" of the prop.  We went through some rough stuff on the trip to MV on then to SE Oregon.  I had some pretty good oil/dust residue on my tail section.  
 
 With John H's recommendation, I turned the last 6" down and further away from my prop.  Since then things have been better.  Haven't flown in that much bumpy air since then.  But prop and far aft of engine staying a bit cleaner than is same conditions prior.
 
 Easy and cheap experiment if you wanted to check.
 
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  _________________ Thanks too much,
 
 
John Bickham
 
Mark III-C w/ 912UL
 
St. Francisville, LA
 
 
I know many pilots and a few true aviators.  There is a distinct difference that I have the greatest respect for. | 
			 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 6:46 am    Post subject: Re: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				My Jabiru has a rather small home-made air/oil separator with a drain cock at the bottom with a hose that extends below the bottom of the fabric in the back. I empty that after every flight or two, usually just a few drops but what comes out of there I would not want to route back to my engine, thought some Jabiru operators do. That stuff is nasty. The air/oil separator also has a hose connected to the air outlet that goes overboard too to make sure there is no back pressure and the crankcase can still breath normally if the separator fills up.
 
 Once I started emptying the separator regularly and keep the oil level at the currently recommended relatively low level (Jabiru changed their recomendation too) I get zero oil streak on the Slingshot tail.
 
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Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		Vic Peters
 
  
  Joined: 30 Oct 2009 Posts: 54 Location: Millinocket, Maine
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 7:12 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				All or none,
 
 I simply put a loop up from the oil tank. Oil drains back water vapor and 
 whatever else
 blows out directly at prop no mess.
 
 I've seen drawings of other craft that cut a slot in the overflow tubing 
 inside the cowling
 and extend the tube outside. Any excess vacuum only pulls cowling air.
 
 Vic
 Xtra 912
 
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  _________________ Vic
 
912ul Xtra
 
Maine
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 7:29 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		   I simply put a loop up from the oil tank. Oil drains back water vapor and 
  whatever else
  blows out directly at prop no mess.
 
  I've seen drawings of other craft that cut a slot in the overflow tubing 
  inside the cowling
  and extend the tube outside. Any excess vacuum only pulls cowling air.
 
  Vic
 
 | 	  
 
 Vic/Gang:
 
 There is a steady stream of 3 to 5 psi air (blowby) exiting the vent tube. 
 I would think, in a down draft, serious negative G situation, when the oil 
 hits the lid of the oil tank, it will be going out the vent, loop or not.
 
 Personally, I want the waste material that is a byproduct of gasoline engine 
 to be dumped overboard.
 
 This is the way I operate my 912ULS.  May not be recommended or approved by 
 Rotax.
 
 The 912ULS uses crankcase pressure to push oil out of the crankcase back to 
 the oil tank.  As long as the engine is running, there is 3 to 5 psi 
 pressure in the vent line.
 
 john h
 mkIII - When it gets warm enough to fly, it will be raining.  ;-(
 
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  _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		ulflyer(at)verizon.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 7:44 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				Hi Ralph,
 Man you testing this old guys memory.  Look at the crank case vent 
 tube on some small certified aircraft like a 150 or 152 Cessna.  Its 
 a little fuzzy but on our 115 HP Lycoming powered 1973 Citabria I 
 believe the end of crank case vent tube was cut at an slight 
 angle.  Can't recall if the angle faced forward or rearward.  It also 
 had a hole of about 3/16" drilled in either the front or rear side of 
 the tube about an inch or so above the end.  According to our A&I 
 this hole was there for a purpose if the normal exit should become 
 plugged.  I would also think the hole may reduce any siphon effect.
 jerb
 
 At 08:33 AM 12/4/2009, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 
 Guys,
 
 My 912 is low on oil occasionally and it's not because the engine is 
 burning it. It's being sucked out of the vent tube. This tube runs 
 down alongside the bottom of the engine and exits in front of the 
 prop. I find evidence of oil on the prop if I fill the oil to the 
 marks on the dipstick.
 
 Is there a better way of venting the oil canister?
 
 The tube is flat on the bottom and Mark German (builder) thinks the 
 venturi effect is sucking out the oil. He told me to file the vent 
 tube at about a 45 deg angle so it would have an opening towards the 
 front. Then it will have a positive pressure instead of a negative one.
 
 What kind of oil canister venting do some of you guys have on your 912's?
 
 Ralph B
 
 --------
 Ralph B
 Original Firestar 447
 N91493 E-AB
 970 hours
 23 years flying it
 Kolbra 912UL
 N20386
 1 year flying it
 110 hrs
 
 
 Read this topic online here:
 
 http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 76174#276174
 
 
 | 	 
 
 
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		rlaird
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 373 Location: Houston
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 7:48 am    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				(How can I NOT jump in... this is getting almost as good as SeaFoam!  
 
 The angle cut and backup holes are nice touches... however....  if you get a kink in the tube somewhere between any backup holes and the vent at the top of the tank, then the 912ULS will have trouble circulating the oil through the engine.  Ask me how I know!  :-p
  
 
   -- Robert
 On Mon, Dec 7, 2009 at 9:42 AM, jerb <ulflyer(at)verizon.net (ulflyer(at)verizon.net)> wrote:
 [quote] --> Kolb-List message posted by: jerb <ulflyer(at)verizon.net (ulflyer(at)verizon.net)>
  
  Hi Ralph,
  Man you testing this old guys memory.  Look at the crank case vent tube on some small certified aircraft like a 150 or 152 Cessna.  Its a little fuzzy but on our 115 HP Lycoming powered 1973 Citabria I believe the end of crank case vent tube was cut at an slight angle.  Can't recall if the angle faced forward or rearward.  It also had a hole of about 3/16" drilled in either the front or rear side of the tube about an inch or so above the end.  According to our A&I this hole was there for a purpose if the normal exit should become plugged.  I would also think the hole may reduce any siphon effect.
   jerb
  
  
  
  At 08:33 AM 12/4/2009, you wrote:
  
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   --> Kolb-List message posted by: "Ralph B" <ul15(at)juno.com (ul15(at)juno.com)>
  
  Guys,
  
  My 912 is low on oil occasionally and it's not because the engine is burning it. It's being sucked out of the vent tube. This tube runs down alongside the bottom of the engine and exits in front of the prop. I find evidence of oil on the prop if I fill the oil to the marks on the dipstick.
   
  Is there a better way of venting the oil canister?
  
 
  The tube is flat on the bottom and Mark German (builder) thinks the venturi effect is sucking out the oil. He told me to file the vent tube at about a 45 deg angle so it would have an opening towards the front. Then it will have a positive pressure instead of a negative one.
   
  What kind of oil canister venting do some of you guys have on your 912's?
  
  Ralph B
  
 
  --------
  Ralph B
  Original Firestar 447
  N91493 E-AB
  970 hours
  23 years flying it
  Kolbra 912UL
  N20386
  1 year flying it
  110 hrs
  
  
  
  
  Read this topic online here:
  
  http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=276174#276174
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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 [b]
 
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  _________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Robert Laird
 
formerly: MkIIIc w/ 912ULS  &  Gyrobee
 
current:  Autogyro Cavalon w/ 914ULS
 
Houston, TX area
 
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		elleryweld(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 4:10 pm    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				Thom Riddle
    have you got a print of how that is made ? I know a friend that needs one 
     
    Ellery in Maine 
    Making skis for the Mk3C
  
  
  
    --
 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 5:58 pm    Post subject: Re: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				Ellery,
 
 I didn't build the airplane but it is a simple device. The breather hose goes into the top. A fitting in the bottom has a shut-off valve with a hose to the bottom of the airplane so you can drain it at your convenience. Near the top but coming out the side is another fitting with a hose attached going overboard also. This last one allows the breather to work and the container just catches the oil and condensation at the bottom. Actually both in inlet and outlet (not the drain) fittings can be in the top or near the top if that is easier to configure.
 
 The container can be made of anything that will stand high oil temperature. To work effectively the container should be more tall than squat but of any volume from a 4-6 oz or so as a minimum. The smaller it is the more often you'll have to drain it. Go to any of the aircraft suppliers and look at their air/oll separators. Mine has the bottom fitting with shut-off valve that most do not. The valve allowing me to decide when to dump it into a waste container instead of dripping all over the airplane. 
 
 I hope this description helps.
 
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  _________________ Thom Riddle
 
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		elleryweld(at)AOL.COM Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Dec 08, 2009 5:36 pm    Post subject: oil sucked out of my 912 | 
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				Thom R
     
    Thanks I will weld up a couple of these  in aluminum They will make a couple of my aviation buddies a great Christmas gift 
     
    Ellery
  
  
  
    --
 
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