My J230 has the symtoms described, but I have the fuel flow sensor installed in the wrong place! (I could not feed the sensors cables down the central duct - try as I might with all sorts of cable threaders). My fuel pump is in the fuel line between the electric pump and the mechanical pump. This is warned against in the fuel computer installation instructions. As a result, when the electric fuel pump is on my fuel flow appears to increase 2-3 litres per hour at idle and 5-6 litres per hour at 2900 rpm. I never noticed any fuel leakage or engine condition change when the electric pump is switched back on. For example after a long flight when the engine is stable when I switch back on the electric pump in preparation landing, the motor note, revs, CHT, and EGT, remain the same no matter what the pump configuration. So I think it is the pulses after the electric fuel pump unevenly driving the sensor rotor speed; the signal processing must not average out this affect leaving the fuel flow/consumption reading erroneously high (safer than an under reading error).
I have never left my electric pump on in the cruise long enough to check whether extra fuel is actually being consumed, but I believe it is not. If running both pumps together caused additional fuel usage then either there is a leak in the pipe work or the Carb needle valve is becoming compramised.
If anyone can tell me the trick to threading cables down the central spine of my J230c (it has been done on another J230c with no problem), I would be grateful. My J230c came out without the central tank warning light and I would like to fit one. While not trusting the Jab fuel guages I have never had a problem. Pre flight tank dipping, calibating the fuel flow sensor makes me feel reasonably secure, even when I can end up with one tank indicating almost empty and the other 3/4 full.
Regards
Alan