What’s ‘tetraetyl’ lead and why should we care?The world avgas supply relies on a single supplier of tetraetyl lead.
How would that affect the price of our 100ll?I wonder if they could import some from the U.S. to tide them over.
What the crap? One source for the whole freakin' country?
I wonder if they could import some from the U.S. to tide them over.
I expect the eastern side of the country already does from New England or the mid-west, as it's a long way to ship avgas from Edmonton.
What’s ‘tetraetyl’ lead and why should we care?
(snark, snark, snark)
Lack of a sense of humor is its own reward.I spent last night at the county level 'spelling bee' competition. If the missing letter 'h' in ethyl makes it difficult for you to recognize the word, you should probably re-do 6th or 7th grade.
But yes, its TEL and you should care that we are down to a single source situation with the sole manufacturer located in the UK.
So, the av fuel is quarantined. What happened to it..??
What's the biggest obstacle in making our planes unleaded burnable? All politics and conspiracy aside, how hard would it be for Lyco and Conti to build a 360 equivalent that runs on regular 91 or 93 octane gas?
Or better yet, ditch gas and move to JETA? Looks like Diamond has had relatively good success in the diesel area, and you see Piper selling diesel planes in Europe to be able to burn JET A. What's the biggest obstacle there?
Seems like Continental already has a perfect engine here? Why aren't we using it more?
http://continentaldiesel.com/typo3/index.php?id=84&L=1
Sure its HP is a little less at sea level, BUT, given that it is turbocharged you probably get much better performance out of that engine in a Piper Archer than your traditional O360 cruising along at 10,5K. The TBO of that thing is 2,100 hrs.. diesels make more sense given their lower end torque lines up better with prop efficiencies. And this diesel burns 4.7-5.8 gal/hr. Looks like it is already STC'd for the Cessna 172 and Piper 28 Archer series
I don't get it.. there must be something I'm missing.. why aren't we jumping all over these and delivering every new plane with that engine?
I have heard that hydrogen would make a good replacement fuel.....
I too wondered what specifically they meant by "conductivity" because where I live they don't use electrical conductivity properties of AvGas to measure the fluid flow.From the article:
“ During the quality control process, it was discovered the conductivity level of the fuel did not meet specifications. ”
Of course conductivity can have several meanings and I am not familiar with the spec for avgas.
The newer sensors are based on capacitance I believe.Don't some aircraft use electrical conductivity in their fuel gauge senders, that sit in the gasoline?
From the article:
“ During the quality control process, it was discovered the conductivity level of the fuel did not meet specifications. ”
Of course conductivity can have several meanings and I am not familiar with the spec for avgas.
In general hydrocarbons are electrically non-conductive since there are no ions in most hydrocarbon chains. Salts can be suspended in hydrocarbons (crude oil) and are usually removed by washing with water. You certainly wouldn’t want gasoline to be a part of an electric circuit.I do recall reading somewhere that gasoline is considered an insulator and electrical conductivity is one of the QA tests performed. Don't know what the effects of the conductivity being out of spec would be if any, of if it's just a symptom of something else.
Scavange the lead and blend it with feedstock is prolly worst case. I’m not enough of a chemE to know how to get the lead out.In that case, it sounds like this avgas is contaminated, and the refiner has to figure out a way to get the unwanted compounds out, or else they'll have to destroy it.
Maybe the lead transformed into gold.From the article:
“ During the quality control process, it was discovered the conductivity level of the fuel did not meet specifications. ”
Of course conductivity can have several meanings and I am not familiar with the spec for avgas.
I’m not enough of a chemE to know how to get the lead out.
What's the biggest obstacle in making our planes unleaded burnable? All politics and conspiracy aside, how hard would it be for Lyco and Conti to build a 360 equivalent that runs on regular 91 or 93 octane gas?
I don't get it.. there must be something I'm missing.. why aren't we jumping all over these and delivering every new plane with that engine?
I do recall reading somewhere that gasoline is considered an insulator and electrical conductivity is one of the QA tests performed. Don't know what the effects of the conductivity being out of spec would be if any, of if it's just a symptom of something else.
What's the biggest obstacle in making our planes unleaded burnable? All politics and conspiracy aside, how hard would it be for Lyco and Conti to build a 360 equivalent that runs on regular 91 or 93 octane gas?
Or better yet, ditch gas and move to JETA? Looks like Diamond has had relatively good success in the diesel area, and you see Piper selling diesel planes in Europe to be able to burn JET A. What's the biggest obstacle there?
Seems like Continental already has a perfect engine here? Why aren't we using it more?
http://continentaldiesel.com/typo3/index.php?id=84&L=1
Sure its HP is a little less at sea level, BUT, given that it is turbocharged you probably get much better performance out of that engine in a Piper Archer than your traditional O360 cruising along at 10,5K. The TBO of that thing is 2,100 hrs.. diesels make more sense given their lower end torque lines up better with prop efficiencies. And this diesel burns 4.7-5.8 gal/hr. Looks like it is already STC'd for the Cessna 172 and Piper 28 Archer series
I don't get it.. there must be something I'm missing.. why aren't we jumping all over these and delivering every new plane with that engine?
The maintenance operation in the hangar attached to my office is a certified Diamond maintenance center. They have customers with both the Thielert and the Austro engines in their Diamonds. Just one chat with their mechanics was an eye opener for me. Personally a good used Piper Meridian starts to look really good.
I don't get it.. there must be something I'm missing.. why aren't we jumping all over these and delivering every new plane with that engine?
I expect it would increase it.How would that affect the price of our 100ll?