
APPROACHING THE AIRCRAFT:
NOSE AND CHIN BUBBLE AREA:
*NATOPS has you check the
battery compartment before moving on to the cabin area, then come back
to the rest of the nose area after the port fuselage. During the
Fam 0 brief, the instructor demonstrated inspecting the whole nose and
chin bubble area first. BE FLEXIBLE TO YOUR ONWING'S PREFERENCES..
There is an additional drain,
the fuel drain, located in the middle of the under fuselage, about where
you would expect the fuel blatter to be.
The large access just aft
of the a/c condenser drain and the oil cooler drain goes to the evaporator
blower. The hot, pressurized Freon from the compressor is sent to
the condenser where the blower cools it as it passes through the condenser
coils (visible from the condenser air vent on the port fuselage).
The, still pressurized but now cool, Freon is then stored in the receiver
dryer until needed. Now, when the a/c is turned on (and becomes functional)
a low pressure is created between the compressor and the evaporator, which
in turn opens an expansion valve. The expansion valve meters the
Freon to the evaporator (s 7-4).