Palmpilot said:
a high-octane unleaded replacement for 100LL says it's impossible, according to Aviation Week. "There is no such thing as a drop-in unleaded fuel to replace 100 [LL]," Dan Pourreau...
www.avweb.com
Dan appears to be making the common mistake of confusing *inspection* criteria of a fuel with *core properties* of the fuel. The core properties are generally established in this case by full-scale testing on aircraft engines... then, a diligent engineer will identify which inspection criteria to use in the field to verify that a given fuel sample is adequate relative to the core properties. Octane test engine tests alone are not adequate to do that, since octane test engines don't accurately represent the full operating envelope of an aircraft engine. That's why avgas specifications include *other* composition controls as well.
GAMI has in fact come up with a formulation that meets or exceeds the requirements for all piston engines in the fleet. Unfortunately, Lyondell/VP-Racing and Swift Fuels have not.
StraightnLevel said:
Sounds like a possibly terminal case of sour grapes. Take two tankfuls of G100UL and call me in the morning.
Upton Sinclair wisely explained that it is very difficult to explain something to someone whose employment is dependent on them NOT understanding it.
Captain Xap said:
G100UL doesn't quite fall within all the ASTM specifications of 100LL - I think it's slightly too dense or something like that - which is one of the reasons they aren't part of the PAFI/EAGLE program.
Actually, the 100LL ASTM specification, D910, doesn't limit fuel density. It only requires that the manufacturer report density. Most 100LL is less dense than G100UL, but on occasion, there are batches of 100LL that are as dense as G100UL. In any case, that wasn't the reason GAMI didn't join PAFI, and PAFI doesn't require candidate fuels to meet D910, the 100LL spec. The FAA foolishly tried to make that happen for 20 years, and failed... that's when they launched PAFI.
Captain Xap said:
it may well be that the ASTM standards are unnecessarily restrictive.
That certainly is true, and the basis of the FAA's failed 20 year effort... but then, they only wasted a $200 million or so of the taxpayers' money, so no harm, no foul, eh?
455 Bravo Uniform said:
It would have been easier and less costly (except for the piston owner) than this 50 year fuel fiasco for someone to have come up with an STC that involves a knock sensor that modifies anything (timing, fuel, rpm) if a ham fisted pilot or bad fueled engine begins to detonate. Buick figured it out for their turboed production vehicles in the 1980's. Then the need for lead would go away. Lead fouls O2 sensors, so there's that chicken & egg thing.
Now, now... the FAA's only been at it for 33 years. Patience, grasshopper! GAMI solved the problem in a year, but then it took 12 years to get the FAA to approve it, lightning speed by comparison. The problem with a knock sensor, if you can make it work with all the white noise generated by the prop, is that whatever you do to STOP the knock also reduces the engines power output... and for certification reasons, that's a non-starter... now your allowable gross weight, balked landing performance, climb rate... other safety important performance attributes, change in some undefined fashion. That requires that the airplane go through certification over again. No one has the time or funds to recertify all the aircraft in the fleet via flight testing, etc.
chemgeek said:
Big oil has been a dismal failure in developing an alternative to 100LL.
Big oil isn't very excited about avgas one way or the other, it's such a tiny product volume. And the FAA stepped in around 1991 and told the oil companies that the FAA would lead the effort. When folks tried to color outside the lines, the FAA exerted coercive force to keep folks in line... Remember, if the FAA decides your *jet fuel* isn't acceptable, that can be a huge expensive problem. And certain FAA folks reportedly threatened to do just that. So although unfortunate, I can't fault big oil too much for not pointing out to the FAA that the emperor has no clothes. OTOH, there are those in big oil who want to ride the lead donkey as LONG as possible... as long as there's lead, this small volume but high margin product is protected from new market entrants. If you make avgas without lead, all kinds of folks might get in on the act, and compete away those tasty margins.
tspear said:
making noise that to be a commercial product and protect against liability, the fuel must meet an {ASTM} spec.
Regulators, lawyers, and insurance companies don't think so. Those spreading FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) have found this refrain useful, but the facts don't support it.
Paul