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#11
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But the K25 carburettor was pretty advanced for its time and for instance had automatic mixture adjustment. I tend to agree with Galway that it is unlikely the later I-16's suffered from neg g cutout, but one would have to be sure.
The K25 was also used with the M62/M63 engines, as was the K63 (AK-25-4DF and AK-63-TK). The technical descriptions of these carburettors, as far as I could find them, made no statement regarding the working principle (float or no float) or about behaviour under negative g. --- OK, thanks SaQSoN. |
#12
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K-25-4 family was all float, that's for sure.
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#13
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Thanks everybody for your constructive posts,
I still have one more question, namely what the situation was on the AM-35/-38 engine family used on the MiG-3 and IL-2. Did these have float, floatless or injection type carbs!? |
#14
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Floatless carb.
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#15
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Hi SaQSoN, can you translate this?
Quote:
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#16
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#17
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In short words, it says, that at 26 Dec. 1940, Soviet government issued an order to produce AM-35 engines with floatless carbs only. However, this order was not obeyed at full. Only some engines were produced with such carbs, while most were equipped with the float carbs.
This made me search more thoroughly through my vast reference library and I actually found there an original manuals for AM-38 and AM-35 engines. According to them, the engine was equipped with 4 float carburettors, installed after the supercharger, each carb. serving 3 cylinders. This carburettors were equipped with special devices, preventing fuel overflow at a negative G, which made those engine fully aerobatic (according to the said manual). |
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