Fri Jun 19, 2015 10:12 am
I had an intermittent engine failure (aka "crapping out") in my old C170 once years ago. Limped back to the airport from about 20 miles away, with the engine cutting in and out, and lost 1000' of altitude in the process. Landed safely, taxi'd back to the hangar just fine. Tore into it, turns out the fuel inlet screen at the carb was clogged with some weird fiberous stuff. It looked like what you'd get if you dropped a red shop rag in the fuel tank and just let it dissolve over many years. (maybe that's what happened??). This stuff made it past the screens (if any) at the fuel tank outlet(s), past the gascolator, and past the fine screen inside the engine-driven fuel pump that was part of the 1948 170 fuel system. I'd owned the airplane for close to 10 years & annualled it with three different IA's, none of whom ever checked that screen or told me to. The fuel lines at the carb were configured in such a way (hard lines, check valve, a couple of tees) that it was a PITA to pull the screen, so I guess nobody ever wanted to mess with it. Checking the carb inlet screen at every annual became part of the ritual after that...even though I never again found anything in them, on that plane or the two I've had since.