Another Saturday, another Maintenance Day.
It's been a bitter cold week in Indiana, WIXers. I personally spent a good portion of the week huddled under every blanket I own, with cats duct-taped to my feet. But we got a little bit of break for the weekend: temperatures got clear up into the twenties, and it seemed balmy. Why, I didn't even put on the long-johns for the maintenance day. But then, all of the planned work was indoors anyhow.
A fairly light turnout among the maintenance force, but we still had people enough to get the job done, and enough slack in the schedule to actually have a lunch break and everything (we have been busy enough the last two weeks that we actually forgot to eat).
At least this week, the ramp shack didn't need any work! This month, we've had heater failure, electrical failure, toilet freeze-up, and you name it. It was nice, for a change, to not have to cut half of the workforce loose to remedy the infrastructure problems.
So anyhow, we've now pretty much wrapped up the engine prep, and that involved lots of detail work, which isn't necessarily all that photogenic, but here come the couple shots that were captured before the camera batteries died ...
There's PJ under the blower case. She was replacing the square plug in the case drain, which was installed by the OH shop to seal it up, with the hose-barb fitting used to connect the drain pipe.
That case drain is one of the things our fire guard looks for during engine start. When the primer is doing its job, fuel streams out of that pipe. The pilot, who can't see it, gets a hand signal to indicate "fuel" or "no fuel."
We had various people combing the engine, doing QA--checking fasteners and safetying and such--and the rear-case items needed to be installed, not least of which was the missing fuel transfer pipe, which was returned to us earlier in the week.
There's Rich, the Official Dad of IndyJen, safetying the three filister-head screws at the carb end of that pipe. The pipe goes from a triangular pad on the aft-left corner of the carb, snakes around the left side of the carb and down to the top of the blower case, where it connects with a banjo fitting. Just visible beyond the case is the Other Rich, who was safetying the bolt on that end.
That pipe is a critical item, as the engine won't run without it. We had the disappointing experience of getting out our "spare" pipe from the hangar, and discovering that it is no spare at all--about eight inches too short, clearly belongs to a different engine. But as I say, the overhauler, who's been good to us throughout this whole process, came through with the proper one.
Having killed the camera batteries taking those two photos, we then had plenty of free time for installing the various fittings on the rear case--fuel lines, primer lines, oil inlet and outlet fittings, oil temp probe and oil pressure nipple.
The dash-31 engine was always used in multi-engine applications (as far as I know, it was only for Harpoons and Venturas), so quite a few fitting locations are mirror-image: you use the one appropriate to the side the engine will be installed on. For example, the oil pressure fitting, which feeds the gauge in the cockpit, installs on the aft "shoulder" of the case, on the inboard side. If it's the left engine, the fitting goes on the right side of the engine.
There's a similar situation with the hydraulic pump, and tachometer generator. They can go on either side of the case, as needed.
We're still waiting for the starter to come in, but the accessory shop called this week, and it's on its way back to us. If it comes in, we'll have it installed in no time Saturday, and the generator right afterwards. It's all down to the weather, apart from that--if conditions are reasonable, we could be hanging this engine next weekend.
I will be sure to put fresh batteries in the camera for that!
In the meantime, Gaylon has put together a slide show of the process used to overhaul the cowl flap actuators. I'll post up a little article about that mebbe mid-week.
That's the news from the AMHF ramp--see you next time,
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IndyJen
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