Wed Mar 13, 2013 10:31 am
I have 70+ gallon tanks in my 182. I don't keep them full most of the time (but do make a point of it occasionally to keep the bladders healthy), and have never seen water in Colorado except when I briefly kept a different plane tied up outside.
The mantra says that condensation is the culprit...but it never made a lot of sense to me. If moist air has water content between 1% and 3% of the mass at saturation, and the volume of air is something around 40 gallons, then in the the worst case scenario where the temp goes from foggy at 85F to 32F every night, the volume could, at worst, yield a cc or so ( 0.2 teaspoons). If this happened every day, it would take about 8 months to add up to a cup. Every day...from hot n muggy to freezing.
My short-lived, outdoor-storage water-in-the-tanks issue went away as soon as I replaced the seals on the caps, and has only re-appeared once in decades since from one rare prolonged flight through heavy weather. The old seals looked fine, but were several thousandths of an inch thinner than the ones I replaced them with. I found the same thing on my current 182.
What about other folks? Have you found water that was definitely from venting moist air and condensation? Hearing "...yes, it happens..." would get rid of my skepticism.
I am a sumpnsniffer too, but purely out of a drilled-in habit...it's important to me more because it forces me to spend more time on the pre-flight (which has, on a few occasions, been critically important), rather than being from any actual experience I have with water in the go juice.