by M Lightsey » Thu Sep 15, 2011 3:14 pm
If most of your flying is cross country traveling, then by all means incorporate extra fuel. It's what you do most of the time.
My point is simply that if most of your flying is touch and goes, or little Sunday trips to breakfast, don't run up the expense, slow the project down, and add the weight of extra fuel tanks.
Every piece of an airplane is connected to every other piece and even small changes have sometimes major consequences. For an extra few gallons of fuel you have to consider head pressure, valving, lines, quantity indication, C/G, useful load, instrument space, leg room, etc. It's no small thing, but if it make the airplane better for what you do most of time, go for it.
I've just found that guys wildly underestimate the magnitude of work required to make "small" changes, so they wind up making their lives a lot more difficult for something that they really could have lived without.
Mark
If most of your flying is cross country traveling, then by all means incorporate extra fuel. It's what you do most of the time.
My point is simply that if [b][i]most[/i][/b] of your flying is touch and goes, or little Sunday trips to breakfast, don't run up the expense, slow the project down, and add the weight of extra fuel tanks.
Every piece of an airplane is connected to every other piece and even small changes have sometimes major consequences. For an extra few gallons of fuel you have to consider head pressure, valving, lines, quantity indication, C/G, useful load, instrument space, leg room, etc. It's no small thing, but if it make the airplane better for what you do most of time, go for it.
I've just found that guys wildly underestimate the magnitude of work required to make "small" changes, so they wind up making their lives a lot more difficult for something that they really could have lived without.
Mark