
Fuel odor when maneuvering in flight.
Moderators: GAHorn, Karl Towle, Bruce Fenstermacher
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Fuel odor when maneuvering in flight.
Hello all! I am getting the smell of fuel whenever maneuvering in flight. I have partially pulled the headliner to check the hose near the T and vent but haven't seen an issue yet. My first plan is to look for an obvious leak and replace the tubing near the T and vent. Anyone have any experience with fuel smells like this? Do you need to drain the tanks if you are only replacing the vent line tubing? BTW '52 170B. Thanks in advance. Skip 

- Bruce Fenstermacher
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No you don't need to drain the tanks to replace the tubing in the vent line.
While it is a good idea to check for fuel leak sources when fuel is smelled it is not unusual, in my 170 anyway, to smell fuel when maneuvering. If I recall older discussions others will collaborate this.
While it is a good idea to check for fuel leak sources when fuel is smelled it is not unusual, in my 170 anyway, to smell fuel when maneuvering. If I recall older discussions others will collaborate this.
CAUTION - My forum posts may be worth what you paid for them!
Bruce Fenstermacher, Past President, TIC170A
Email: brucefenster at gmail.com
Bruce Fenstermacher, Past President, TIC170A
Email: brucefenster at gmail.com
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Just noticed this for the first time today myself, experienced "moderate" turbulence between Whitehorse and Haines Junction (30 knot surface tailwind meets 30 knot winds aloft coming from 10'o'clock) smelled fuel but noticed nothing else out of the ordinary. Been in turbulence before and never smelled fuel in either my 170 or old 172's I used to fly. However, I had just topped the tanks off about 15-20 minutes previous.
Richard
N3477C
'55 B model (Franklin 6A-165-B3 powered, any others out there?)
N3477C
'55 B model (Franklin 6A-165-B3 powered, any others out there?)
- blueldr
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Any time that a fuel smell occurs in the cabin, I immediately suspect the rubber hoses on the cross cabin fuel vent line.
With full, or nearly full tanks, this line will flood with fuel when the aircraft nose is lowered in flight. If the connector hoses are loose or deteriorated, the cuel smell can become very strong.
With full, or nearly full tanks, this line will flood with fuel when the aircraft nose is lowered in flight. If the connector hoses are loose or deteriorated, the cuel smell can become very strong.
BL
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I have exerienced the same smell occasionally, sometimes landing, and always before startup. I assumed that it was the fuel sampler that I was smelling before startup. Turns out my fuel selector has been weeping around the top gasket a little, just not quite enough to drip. You might want to the inspection covers and have a look at that to.
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- Roesbery
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- GAHorn
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Another source of fuel odors can be when landing short with full tanks. Fuel will regurgitate out of the gooseneck vent onto the upper windshield, which is not as "sealed" as one might think. (But the most common reason is dry/cracked interconnect hoses in the overhead above the headliner. Smoking is hazardous to your health.) 

'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
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50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.

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fuel odorwhen maeuvering in flight
Replacing the hose connectors on each side of the vent did the job! did a lot of maneuvers and a cople of landings.. no odors. Thanks for your input. Problem solved! 

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