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Even with all the things Rich mentions here, the bottom line is that
these systems seem to work. From all those I have talked to that have a Raycor following the TP filter, the 2 uM Raycor element stays very clean for long periods of time and only accumulates a small bit of water. Then when the fuel is taken up by the engine it is going through another Raycor and then the engine filter. I have pretty high confidence that the engine is getting clean fuel. One other thing I am planning is to have the polishing system uptake lower in the tank than the engine fuel uptake. Doug s/v Callista "Steven Shelikoff" wrote in message ... On Sun, 30 Nov 2003 06:14:16 GMT, Rich Hampel wrote: At Trawlersfest I had two lengthy discussions with paper towel filter advocates. Their theory is that the random oriented strands of the paper towel can trap any size particle, down to sub-micron, instead of acting like a sieve to pass through anything below a given size (they like to avoid mentioning that the "sieve" stops anything above it's rated size). Next time you get into this type of discussion, ask them how the fibers are held together so that they dont release particles under increasing differential pressure. You need a resin to hold the fibers together. Then ask them how much particulate bypasses the 'knife edge' seal that 'bites' into the end of the paper roll. Then get a glass of water, crumple up some of their paper roll, put it into the glass of water. Wait to see how long the paper takes to disintegrate into a slurry. Tell me where on this planet that there is NO water in fuel oil, either as free water or as an emulsion. ;-) Apparently in my tank since after filtering quite a lot of fuel, the paper elements come out in one hard solid piece. Even before I installed the filters, I got tiny amounts of water in the bottom drain of my Racor. One other thing you're forgetting is that even if the paper element does trap water (which of course it will if there is water in the fuel) the water ends up staying on the bottom of the element because it's heavier then the fuel, and since oil and water don't mix the water doesn't get drawn up into the top part of the filter since it's already soaked in oil. The fuel flows from bottom to top through the canister so any "disintegrated" paper will be trapped by the water-free paper above it. You have to significantly fill the canister with water before any water impregnated paper "slurry" can possibly get out. If you have that much of a water problem, you should be changing the elements frequently. Steve |
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