TMetzinger
Final Approach
Lots of the fleet that burned most of the avgas is now burning Jet A as they retire the older airframes and engines.
. . . I've asked the FBO why, and he cited mainly costs along with availability. After the cost of the equipment (which is more like North of $1MM), it's sketchy getting it. I'm guessing the oil company on the field has some say-so in the matter. The big question I guess is, who's going to pay to set it up and guarantee delivery? And insure it?
I've asked the FBO why, and he cited mainly costs along with availability. After the cost of the equipment (which is more like North of $1MM), it's sketchy getting it. I'm guessing the oil company on the field has some say-so in the matter. The big question I guess is, who's going to pay to set it up and guarantee delivery? And insure it?
This is a real no-brainer. Folks aren't flying the way they used to. It isn't legions of experimentals burning mogas. Most of those spend more time begin tinkered with than flying, I think. Heck, if I want to buy mogas sans booze I have to go to a marina. That's open if I could get my airplane STC'd to burn the stuff which I can't.
The twin Velocity!
I'm sure it costs a pretty penny to get an above ground (not even touching in-ground) storage container for just E0 along with all of the EPA containment requirements. You'd have to have a pretty stout demand in order to make the finances work I'd think. I doubt the oil company would have a problem with it at all since it likely contains about the same amount of their "product" in E0 as 100LL does.
I've heard most people using E0 at the airfield find a small utility/motorcycle trailer with a simple 50-80gallon tank and tow it back and forth from the local fuel stop to the hangar. However, I doubt most airports operators will allow you to store the trailer/fuel on airport grounds, but it's generally small enough to fit in a backyard at the house.
speak for yourself. The only biofuel i want to use is the one made from dead dinosaurs. Nearly all commercially viable biofuel processes today use material that can be food, and I personally find it immoral to be burning our food and driving up the worldwide cost of nutrition while we sit on an ever-increasing glut of petroleum.The question was "What should we use?" not "What can we use?" We should be using bio fuels, but we can't.
speak for yourself. The only biofuel i want to use is the one made from dead dinosaurs. Nearly all commercially viable biofuel processes today use material that can be food, and I personally find it immoral to be burning our food and driving up the worldwide cost of nutrition while we sit on an ever-increasing glut of petroleum.
Is it possible we could run out of petroleum someday? Maybe. I doubt it.
Is it possible that someday biofuels will be more economical to produce than petroleum ? Yes, probably. So let's leave it to the market to determine when and if that happens, and leave utopian idealism out of energy policy in the meantime.
speak for yourself. The only biofuel i want to use is the one made from dead dinosaurs. Nearly all commercially viable biofuel processes today use material that can be food, and I personally find it immoral to be burning our food and driving up the worldwide cost of nutrition while we sit on an ever-increasing glut of petroleum.
Is it possible we could run out of petroleum someday? Maybe. I doubt it.
Is it possible that someday biofuels will be more economical to produce than petroleum ? Yes, probably. So let's leave it to the market to determine when and if that happens, and leave utopian idealism out of energy policy in the meantime.
yawn. How short is your memory ? It was just a few years ago we were at "peak oil". $150/BBL is just the beginning. Get your solar panels and bicycle now while they're still available.This sounds like the owner of a buggy whip factory in 1850. It's not maybe but a certainy that we will run out of petro." The market" has never been very good at determining anything! Most real advances in the U.S. Have initially been government funded. The market was thought ( for instance) to be able to police Wall Street and we see how that's worked out both in 1929 and 2007! A disaster! Allan Greenspan, mr. Mumbles , finally apologized but the damage was done.
This sounds like the owner of a buggy whip factory in 1850. It's not maybe but a certainy that we will run out of petro." The market" has never been very good at determining anything! Most real advances in the U.S. Have initially been government funded. The market was thought ( for instance) to be able to police Wall Street and we see how that's worked out both in 1929 and 2007! A disaster! Allan Greenspan, mr. Mumbles , finally apologized but the damage was done.
This sounds like the owner of a buggy whip factory in 1850. It's not maybe but a certainy that we will run out of petro." The market" has never been very good at determining anything! Most real advances in the U.S. Have initially been government funded. The market was thought ( for instance) to be able to police Wall Street and we see how that's worked out both in 1929 and 2007! A disaster! Allan Greenspan, mr. Mumbles , finally apologized but the damage was done.
The depression of 1929 would not have been as long or severe if the Federal Reserve had not been invented. A run started on the banks and the Fed did nothing to stop it. Previously, the big banks would have intervened and prevented wide spread panic, but that was now the Federal Reserves job.The crisis of 2007 was also government fueled by underwriting too much risky debt and easy money.
speak for yourself. The only biofuel i want to use is the one made from dead dinosaurs. Nearly all commercially viable biofuel processes today use material that can be food, and I personally find it immoral to be burning our food and driving up the worldwide cost of nutrition while we sit on an ever-increasing glut of petroleum.
Is it possible we could run out of petroleum someday? Maybe. I doubt it.
Is it possible that someday biofuels will be more economical to produce than petroleum ? Yes, probably. So let's leave it to the market to determine when and if that happens, and leave utopian idealism out of energy policy in the meantime.
They were both due to deregulation which started in Ernest under Ronnie who was total b.s. Subprime loans, no docs, were not dreamed up by the government. They were encouraged by Wall Street. Country wide , for instance, was not a government entity! After 1929, in 1933 Roosevelt formed the Pechora commission which set new rules for Wall Street. Slowly, then more rapidly under Ronnie Reagan, these rules were thrown out. No Wall Street higher up has gone to jail and Wall Street whines about too much regulation. Pitiful!
yes it can, and someday it will on its own when the economics dictate it. Until that time I'd rather not have parasites in washington or brussels dictating that it happen on a particular date and taxing/subsidizing to select the winners&losers of the changeover.Algae can be used as either and grown off the waste of turning natural gas into electricity.
That's enough of that kind of talk, Philip. You are talking about practical, proven things people can do to save money and fly more. No one wants to hear about stuff like that here. The storyline is that mogas is bad and aviation is dying. Try to stick to that script, if you can find the time in between all your cheap flying on clean unleaded fuel.
Yep times change. Some adapt to change and succeed. Other's chose to blame others for their inability to adapt. I'm not going to stop flying and I am confident my kids will be flying when their have their own kids. GA isn't dying, it's just evolving. As I look around our home airports in IL and KS it's the E/AB planes that are flying every weekend, not the Nixon-era spam cans. If you'r rather wallow in self pity, that's ok. Gotta go with your strengths. Meantime we'll be out flying.Reality is a *****! GA in the U.S. Is a shadow of what it was thirty years ago. No one had to lug mo gas around in a can either. Fuel was dirt cheap and bonanzas didn't cost half a million dollars. It's gotten very expensive, plus we are now flying fifty sixty year old aircraft any paying too much for them.
yes it can, and someday it will on its own when the economics dictate it. Until that time I'd rather not have parasites in washington or brussels dictating that it happen on a particular date and taxing/subsidizing to select the winners&losers of the changeover.
sort of. The navy algae fuel program is a scam and a huge waste of taxpayer money, especially in a time of already money-constrained readiness.In the mean time Richard Branson and the U.S. Navy are buying every drop being produced. I don't understand why people think government should invest in new infrastructure, they have all along.
This isn't SZ. Take your drivel there if you so desire.They were both due to deregulation which started in Ernest under Ronnie who was total b.s. Subprime loans, no docs, were not dreamed up by the government. They were encouraged by Wall Street. Country wide , for instance, was not a government entity! After 1929, in 1933 Roosevelt formed the Pechora commission which set new rules for Wall Street. Slowly, then more rapidly under Ronnie Reagan, these rules were thrown out. No Wall Street higher up has gone to jail and Wall Street whines about too much regulation. Pitiful!
speak for yourself. The only biofuel i want to use is the one made from dead dinosaurs. Nearly all commercially viable biofuel processes today use material that can be food, and I personally find it immoral to be burning our food and driving up the worldwide cost of nutrition while we sit on an ever-increasing glut of petroleum.
People who subscribe to peak oil are people who doubt the ingenuity and capability of human beings. Personally, I'll always bet on people finding a way to keep moving forward.
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True energy independence is being able to make your own energy at home, forever. No foreign wars required.
Reality is a *****! GA in the U.S. Is a shadow of what it was thirty years ago. No one had to lug mo gas around in a can either. Fuel was dirt cheap and bonanzas didn't cost half a million dollars. It's gotten very expensive, plus we are now flying fifty sixty year old aircraft any paying too much for them.
Yep times change. Some adapt to change and succeed. Other's chose to blame others for their inability to adapt. I'm not going to stop flying and I am confident my kids will be flying when their have their own kids. GA isn't dying, it's just evolving. As I look around our home airports in IL and KS it's the E/AB planes that are flying every weekend, not the Nixon-era spam cans. If you'r rather wallow in self pity, that's ok. Gotta go with your strengths. Meantime we'll be out flying.
Also.... Fuel distributors need dedicated trucks for 100LL... They cannot carry any other unleaded products in it since the residual lead will contaminate an unleaded product....
I don't need to read articles from "internet experts". This is my business, I work with it every day.Again, I'm saying it's what we should be burning, not what we as consumers can be burning. You should do some reading on bio fuels. There is no need to use food stocks to make bio fuels and the proponents of bio fuels absolutely agree with you that we should not use food stocks in part because they aren't the most efficient.