PaulMillner
Line Up and Wait
Marcus.Wiese said:There's an article by Ben Visser in General Aviation News about the unleaded fuel problem today! Interesting article. Care to comment, Paul?
Unleaded fuels and exhaust valve recession — General Aviation News
What needs to happen to move forward towards an unleaded future for general aviation?generalaviationnews.com
Not sure where Ben is going here... 100LL has a lean rating of 100 and a rich rating of 130. If Ben is saying that unleaded fuel *also* needs a rich rating of 130, he is correct. If, as some have said, he's saying unleaded fuel needs a HIGHER rich rating than leaded fuel to avoid detonation damage, that is erroneous... it comes from a math error (!) in the FAA's "ASTM" octane methodology. It's a sad thing, but goes to show that merely being an ASTM spec is not guarantee of merit.Ben.Visser said:A few years ago, I was giving a talk during a state aviation maintenance symposium when someone in the audience asked if there {were} any potential problems associated with the new proposed unleaded 100 octane avgas.
I explained that there could be a problem with an adequate rich knock rating for the fuel, which could lead to knock complaints in large engines and possible exhaust valve recession on some certified aircraft engines.
I guess Ben is making the point that some folks believe everything they read. But, let's move on. More salient is that "lack of lead" problems in both mogas and avgas generally has come from not understanding the shift in delivered octane that occurs. More on that below.Ben.Visser said:At that point someone else raised his hand and stated that he read on the internet that exhaust valve recession was a complete myth and there was absolutely no risk of this occurring.
I then pointed out that in the 1980s an oil company in California looked over the ASTM D-910 specification for 80/87 avgas and noted that the spec only listed a maximum lead level of 0.5 grams per gallon and no minimum level. It then started selling an unleaded 80/87 avgas. There were no problems for a while, but then there was a rash of engine failures because of exhaust valve recession.
Many of these problems occurred in engines such as the Continental O-200 engine powering Cessna 150s used in flight training operations.
A well-known engine rebuilder from the Twin Cities then got up and shared several slides of engines that he had worked on that failed after using unleaded auto gas and had experienced exhaust valve recession.
Following this information, the person in the audience who said exhaust valve recession was a myth said maybe the engine rebuilder was right, but he could not believe that because the article he read was on the internet, so it had to be true.
This is an exact parallel to the exhaust valve seat recession we saw in automotive engines in the 1980's that was associated with the phasedown of lead in mogas. But it wasn't the lead, it was the associated impact on fuel octane rating. Let me explain.Ben.Visser said:Since that time, I have written several articles about the possibilities of exhaust valve recession once all of the lead is deleted from aviation fuel. These articles had a fair number of comments, including some from people who did not believe that it could happen. I also talked to engine manufacturers who felt that it was not a concern.
And then the University of North Dakota, which has a large well-maintained fleet of aircraft, started running on unleaded Swift UL94 fuel and guess what? They started seeing exhaust valve recession on several aircraft.
Blending gasoline in the 1970's, adding lead was the easiest and least expensive way to raise octane rating. But the octane engines used to measure octane rating were manually operated back then, and somewhat subjective. So two runs on the same sample could give an octane rating as much as 1 octane number apart. Also, the fine for selling gasoline that tested below the advertised number on the pump was as much as $1,000/gallon. So blenders would add extra lead, just in case. As a result, though regular unleaded might be labeled 87 octane on the pump, the actual octane of the fuel could be as high as 89 or 90 on any given day.
As the lead phasedown began in the 1980's it became more and more difficult to achieve octane... very expensive (platinum and rhenium catalyst) and energy intensive technology was required to boost gasoline octane. So blenders sharpened their pencils, and *delivered* octane began to decline while the number on the pump stayed the same.
Finally, the EPA accepted an industry proposal to exonerate blenders from government grab-sampled octane numbers that were too low, as long as the blender could demonstrate that they were in statistical process control (Edward Deming) of their blending process. This lowered delivered octane even more, to the pump stated number plus or minus a few tenths of an octane number.
As this process progressed, some engines without computerized controls began to show distress. The octane the engines were actually running on was declining, even though the number on the pump stayed the same. Fairly extensive work demonstrated this was so by the 1990's, but by then, no one cared anymore, as lead had been outlawed.
It appears the same thing happened to the UND engines... Although they were certified on 91/96 octane avgas in 1962, the Lycoming O320/O360 series engines hardly ever operated on that fuel. Most major blenders ceased making 91/96 by 1964. And, back then, no one leaned very much... they ran their engines rich. So the "91/'96" engines built most of their operating experience running on 100/130 or 100LL (that is rated 100/130).
At UND, however, all of a sudden these "91/96" engines were operating on 94 octane instead of 100 octane. And UND's practice is to lean to peak in cruise, which offers much less detonation resistance than the rich mixture settings of old. It's not surprising that engines began to suffer distress when the delivered octane declined (by six numbers) and the operating conditions were more severe than during the certification of those engines sixty years ago.
That's kind of clumsily stated. But again, it's not the lead, it's the octane rating of the fuel that is material.Ben.Visser said:So why is this happening at flight schools and not in private aircraft operated on Swift fuel or unleaded auto gas?
The big difference is the single source of fuel.
Many private aircraft were broken in on 100LL, plus many are used on cross-country flights, where they are refueled with 100LL occasionally. Most flight schools do all of their refueling at only one location, so most aircraft in a school's fleet never see any lead in normal operation.
The Swift 94UL samples I've seen are only about 2% aromatics. 100LL is often 10% to 20% aromatics. And... there's no research that associates aromatics with valve recession. Lycoming's rationale makes no sense. Besides, much 100/130 avgas also contained aromatics, and has since WW2.Ben.Visser said:The reaction to the UND valve recession problem was interesting. Lycoming thought it could be due to the aromatic content of the Swift fuel.
But guess what? Most 100LL blends have contained aromatics since the early 1970s.
The only difference between 100LL and the Swift fuel is - wait for it - lead.
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