Hello,
Anyone out there installed the direct replacement fuel selector valve Aircraft Spruce sells for $600 (Part# 05-03407
MFR Model# U0411716-500)? Worth the money?
Fuel Selector
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jeffmunday
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Fri Sep 19, 2025 6:58 am
- Name: Jeff Munday
- Location: KSSI
- Aircraft Type: C120 - N508JM
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Fuel Selector
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- Fuel Selector.docx
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- 6643
- Posts: 2729
- Joined: Tue May 01, 2018 7:00 am
- Name: John C
- Location: KLCI, NH
- Aircraft Type: 1946 C140/C90
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Re: Fuel Selector
If you need a new fuel selector, there aren't a whole lot of options to choose from...
John Cooper
www.skyportservices.net
www.skyportservices.net
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V529
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- Name: Victor G
- Location: Michigan
- Aircraft Type: C-120
- Occupation-Interests: Work on airplanes till the cows come home..........they're still out.
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Re: Fuel Selector
Univair sells almost the same thing. Probably more money......
- 7757
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- Name: Chris B
- Location: Missouri
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Re: Fuel Selector
My mechanic installed the new fuel selector in my plane after we sent the engine out for overhaul. So far, I've only done some engine runs and taxi testing on the ground; no flying just yet. While it is quite expensive, it is a huge improvement over the old fuel selector.
The detents are deep and strong. It takes some decent force to get the lever to move, so you know, for sure, when you have moved the lever to the next position. And between the detents, the motion is silky smooth. With my old fuel selector, I was always very slow and super careful because I could feel the binding and the galling as I was moving the lever. Every flight, I wondered if this would be the one where the lever broke and I would need vice grips to move the valve again. But I don't worry about any of that anymore.
So, yes, it was hard to swallow the cost, but now I have great confidence in my fuel selector.
-- Chris B
The detents are deep and strong. It takes some decent force to get the lever to move, so you know, for sure, when you have moved the lever to the next position. And between the detents, the motion is silky smooth. With my old fuel selector, I was always very slow and super careful because I could feel the binding and the galling as I was moving the lever. Every flight, I wondered if this would be the one where the lever broke and I would need vice grips to move the valve again. But I don't worry about any of that anymore.
So, yes, it was hard to swallow the cost, but now I have great confidence in my fuel selector.
-- Chris B
Chris B.
1946 C140
1946 C140
- 6597
- Posts: 526
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- Name: David Sbur
- Location: Vancouver WA KVUO
- Aircraft Type: '46 140 0-200A
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Re: Fuel Selector
Attached is Cessna's solution back in 2005 I think, not cheap and I wonder if anyone actually bought one of their 'kits'. Appears to be for the L-B-R-off valve. I think I saw how this was done and it was rather Rube Goldberg...So, yes, it was hard to swallow the cost, but now I have great confidence in my fuel selector.
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- SEB05-4pricesFuelSelectorCessna.JPG (88.91 KiB) Viewed 73 times
- 6643
- Posts: 2729
- Joined: Tue May 01, 2018 7:00 am
- Name: John C
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Re: Fuel Selector
And, apparently, not applicable to the early planes without "Both". Makes the ACS/Univair solution seem downright cheap!
$4063 in 2005 is about $7000 today...
John Cooper
www.skyportservices.net
www.skyportservices.net