What would cause a vacuum system failure in an airplane with 2 vacuum pumps, say, in a C172R?
As a follow up question, what would cause a partial panel situation in such an airplane?
Before anybody says you are not going to lose two vacuum pumps.....It happened to me in IMC. Lost one pump and a few minutes later lost the other.
The mean time between failure for dry vacuum pumps is roughly 500 hours.
If you have two pumps that were installed around the same time...
I don't agree with the first, but I do agree with the second part and the post about the regulator/shuttle valve. 500 is what the manufacturer recommends as a way to mitigate stupid lawsuits like the Carnahan case. I seem to recall a "Partial Panel" task on the IR PTS, but lets hang the people who build the pumps.
The pumps can last longer, but they have to put a limit on them, like the hour and months in service for an engine. I've seen the pumps in the R, Tempest I think, last well over 1500 hrs. In rental/training aircraft it's hard, if not impossible, for the pilot to know the time on the pumps. If I owned a plane with a single vac and did any IFR flying, you'd better believe the pumps would go at 500 hrs.
Because people are pansies about cleaning a little oil off the belly.Other than that I'm not sure why they didn't go back to wet pumps... seriously, they last.
Before anybody says you are not going to lose two vacuum pumps.....It happened to me in IMC. Lost one pump and a few minutes later lost the other.