I am wrestling with a perplexing problem. In a total loss machine, I can't get the oil to flow, by gravity, through a perfectly clear, newly made, copper line.
Connect to the tank, turn on oil, wait, and nothing comes out at the pump. Can't even draw some through by sucking on the line. The initial line had four horizontal turns in it. Take it off, blow through it with ease, clearing only a small slug of oil. Turn oil tap on, oil flows freely. Blow through pipe very easily. Either way. Put line back on, no oil flows.
So I remake the line replacing the four horizontal turns with two sweeping turns, ie; pulled out so there's always a clear downward path. This worked, initially. Today, however, I could not get any oil to flow. I cut the sweeping turns out and replaced them with a length of clear plastic hose, and guess what? Oil flows sweetly. I forgot to turn the oil off and the pump filled, which has never happened before.
Not sure what the oil grade is; I use "smokeless two stroke oil", the cheapest I can get. It's a light grade and will leak out of anywhere it can escape through, but it won't go down a copper pipe that I want to to go through. Also, the "smokeless" bit is a lie. The oil tank cap is vented. It's 1/4" OD copper tube, which is 4.7mm ID.
What is going on here? Plainly there's some kind of drag, but I'd have thought that would only affect the contacting molecules. The flow rate I need is only modest, but I can't get a cracker. Any ideas as to why this is so?