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Dripstick

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A dripstick is a thin hollow tube installed vertically in the bottoms of fuel tanks of many large aircraft, used to check fuel levels. To read a dripstick, it is withdrawn from the lower surface of the wing. When the top of the dripstick is withdrawn below the level of the fuel, fuel enters it and drips through a hole in the cap.[1] Graduations on it indicate the level of fuel in the tank.

Newer aircraft use a floatstick.

References

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  1. ^ McClellan, J. Mac (November 1998). "Management". Flying. Vol. 125, no. 11. p. 102. ProQuest 216159863 – via ProQuest. In light airplanes you can take the cap off, stick something into the tank and measure the level.
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