Howdy, the previous owner on our 170 installed a Walker Air/Oil Separator from a 180/182 on our bird and never did the field approval to do so. Walker never did a STC for the 170. There is one however for the 172 with an O-300D2 but it shows the oil return line via an exsisting line to a rocker cover. Ours was installed using the accessory case for the return line.
The question, has anyone done a 337/field approval for this? I know there is one on at TIC170A but it is for a Franklin engine.
Can this be done as a follow on STC based on the exsisting 172 STC?
Thanks for the advise.
I really want to get this done and get it legal.
Walker Air/Oil Separator for '49 170A O-300D2
Moderators: GAHorn, Karl Towle, Bruce Fenstermacher
- GAHorn
- Posts: 21290
- Joined: Fri Apr 12, 2002 8:45 pm
I admire you for wanting to get the paperwork legal. You might get a copy of the STC for the similar installation on that engine in a 172 and submit it on a 337 for field approval.
I personally am intrigued by all the interest in air/oil seperators on these airplanes that don't have vacuum pumps. The orginal intent for these devices was to seperate the air/oil on the discharge side of vacuum pumps (which can be considerable oil pumped overboard without one.) But with a venturi system, the only overboard vent is the crankcase vent, and that oil loss is negligible.
But the water vapor that can condense in a seperator can be considerable, and I certainly wouldn't want to condense water and then drain it into my crankcase.
If you don't have a vacuum pump, I'd encourage you to remove it and sell it.
I personally am intrigued by all the interest in air/oil seperators on these airplanes that don't have vacuum pumps. The orginal intent for these devices was to seperate the air/oil on the discharge side of vacuum pumps (which can be considerable oil pumped overboard without one.) But with a venturi system, the only overboard vent is the crankcase vent, and that oil loss is negligible.
But the water vapor that can condense in a seperator can be considerable, and I certainly wouldn't want to condense water and then drain it into my crankcase.
If you don't have a vacuum pump, I'd encourage you to remove it and sell it.
Cessna® is a registered trademark of Textron Aviation, Inc. The International Cessna® 170 Association is an independent owners/operators association dedicated to C170 aircraft and early O-300-powered C172s. We are not affiliated with Cessna® or Textron Aviation, Inc. in any way.