normal position. The loss of either electrical
power or servo air automatically positions the
valve to the emergency position. Below are
situations where this occurs:
A. Both engines shut down (loss of servo
pressure).
B. Cabin altitude is 9,500 feet (aneroid switch
opens circuit to the solenoid valve)
C. AIR BLEED switch to EMER (opens
circuit to the solenoid valve)
D. Complete DC power failure (no power
available to solenoid valve)
E. Servo regulator failure (no servo
pressure available)
Bleed-Air Check Valves (6)
Three bleed-air check valves (Figure 9-2) are
installed in the bleed-air ducting from
each engine. Each check valve allows airflow in
one direction and blocks airflow in the opposite
direction. These check valves prevent loss of
bleed air during single-engine operation or
actuation of the emergency pressurization valves.
Bleed-Air Manifold
The bleed-air manifold serves as a collection
point for engine bleed air from either or both
engines. From the manifold, bleed air is
distributed to the flow control valve for cabin
pressurization and heating, windshield anti-ice
(defog) valve, wing anti-ice, and the hydraulic
reservoir pressure regulator.
Flow Control Valve
The flow control valve regulates the flow of
bleed air to the cabin for normal pressurization
and heating. It is controlled by a two-position
CAB AIR switch on the pressurization module.
The OFF position closes the valve completely.
The ON position allows sense line pressure from
the venturi (located downstream) to modulate
the flow control valve to maintain a constant
airflow to the cabin. With loss of DC electrical
power, the valve fails to the normal ON position.
Cabin-Air Warning Lights
The red L and R CAB AIR warning lights on the
glareshield annunciator panel illuminate when
an associated duct temperature sensor detects
excessive temperatures.
Servo Air Manifold
Bleed air is tapped prior to the bleed-air shutoff
valves and is routed through a check valve to the
servo air manifold (Figure 9-2). From this
manifold, air is ducted directly to the alcohol anti-
icing system and through two regulators. The air
from one regulator is used for cabin temperature
control. Air from the other regulator supplies
servo air pressure to operate the flow control
valve, emergency pressurization valves, and the
pressurization vacuum regulator (jet pump). See
Figure 9-3 for AIR BLEED switch locations.
9-5
FOR TRAINING PURPOSES ONLY
LEARJET 20 SERIES PILOT TRAINING MANUAL
FlightSafety
international
CABIN AIR FLOW
INSTRUMENT PANEL
LOCATOR
AIR BLEED
EMER
ON
OFF
ON
OFF
CAB
AIR
MAX
NORM
OFF
23-003 THROUGH 24-229
25-003 THROUGH 25-064
24-230 THROUGH 24-349
25-070 THROUGH 25-226
24-350 AND SUBSEQUENT
25-227 AND SUBSEQUENT
NORM
MAX
ON
OFF
A
I
R
B
L
E
E
D
AIR
BLEED
Figure 9-3.
AIR BLEED Switches