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petrol engined aeroplanes

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retarded_rob | 17:02 Mon 25th Aug 2003 | How it Works
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how does does the oil sump and feed system work?
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I'm not entirely sure what you want to know, Rob, but whereas car engines are designed to have a pool of oil in the sump at all times, it is normal for aero engines to be designed to have all the oil in circulation. It will of course pool when the engine is not running, but while the engine is running all the oil is churning around.
That way the oil supply is still adequate even during aerobatics.
Most modern petrol aero engines use fuel injection. There was a problem during WWII where older Spitfires would cut out during a roll to the left. The fuel was fed to a normal carburetor and the supply in the float chamber would be flung to the side due to centrifugal force and miss the bottom of the jet tube.

The German pilots knew this (they had fuel injection from the start) and tried to get our boys to roll over to port.
If I remember correctly, most aero engines do not have a sump as such. As Ewood says, there is a positive pressure pump to circulate the oil around the engine and this drains to a seperate tank, usually incorporating an oil cooler, until being pumped back into the engine block etc.

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