Cvair, We could not find any one cause that definitely would starve the engine. As for the fuel line, "kinked" is really just my word and too strong. The plane ran fine Mon on the ground for a long warm up and taxi, then a full power run up by the shop. Then check for leaks, etc. Nothing else done. I arrived Tue and did a warm up, careful check and run up and then a full power takeoff and a 45 min flight with 1 more landing taxi and takeoff. Then the oil, filter were changed, along with a fuel transducer(it monitors the fuel flow for the gauge, does Not in any way control the flow). This took a few hours, then I departed and had good strong climb and normal cruise until I thought I saw the peak temps on the Insight monitor. I could almost imagine that I caused the whole thing by going to full rich, then turning the boost pump on low. But I could not even get enough power to taxi off the runway when I tried to restart and the mech verifyied it would not reach full fuel pressure when trying to prime with the boost pump that night. He found the filter, lines, sumps, nozzels clean. He rerouted the one fuel line, as he didn't like the way it was secured. He surmised one hose fitting was not fully tight and might have sucked air(when I questioned further we realized this was under pressure and not suction) so much for that idea. It still had a factory paint tell tale mark on it. The only other thing was the the diaphram in the controler was wet on the back side, might have leaked, even though we could not find any pin holes even in sunlight. We are not sure that a tiny leak would shut off fuel, but the diaphram was replaced. A plug was checked, no sign of lean overheating. Then all was normal, prime, start, taxi, runup, takeoff, and about a 30 min flight back. That is when I noticed how the sunlight could make the Insight light up full scale and how it had fooled me.
_________________ Bill Greenwood
Spitfire N308WK
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