What is the difference between the two, do they both come from crude oil? What justifies the price between the two? Why is Jet-A cheaper? (Larger demand/volumes?)
I would -think- gasoline would be more expensive to make than diesel or jet fuel since less processing (cracking anyway) would be required.
There are typically at least four process plants (steps) involved in making mogas or avgas components. Jet usually only requires two processing plants, so less energy and overhead in manufacturing. Almost a majority of jet is the result of hydrocracking, a form of cracking in the presence of a CoMo catalyst at 800F in the presence of high-pressure hydrogen, say 3,000 psig.
But right now, diesel is more expensive than gasoline.
Diesel specifications changed in recent years, requiring rather severe hydroprocessing to reduce sulfur content and aromaticity. Diesel actually has less sulfur in it now than jet. Twenty year ago, diesel had 10 to 100 times more sulfur than jet fuel. The diesel hydroprocessing is relatively scarce, and supply/demand raises diesel prices.
{avgas} can't be pipelined in its finished form
Actually, avgas isn’t pipelined in any form, other than as crude oil. The light ends (say isopentane), aviation alkylate, aromatics (say toluene) and lead are combined at the refinery, where all but the lead are manufactured.
{avgas} has to be tankered (usually train) to a terminal that can off load it into trucks for delivery.
The industry term for moving by train is rail... but most avgas moves from the refinery by barge to water-proximate terminals, and then is trucked from there. There is some rail transport of finished avgas (notably Phillips 66 in Borger Texas is not on any useful waterway, nor is Exxon Imperial Oil in Alberta). But barging is MUCH cheaper than rail, and rail cars are in short supply due to crude oil transport demand.
100LL has no speculator involvement influencing the price
That’s not accurate, exactly. Typically, avgas is priced at the refinery gate according to a formula that looks at west coast and gulf coast mogas prices, the difference between premium & regular price, and the difference between conventional and reformulated mogas price. Since *all* of those commodities are traded on markets, those prices are definitely market-influenced. If there’s speculation impact on mogas price, it immediately shows up in avgas wholesale price as well.
Back when mogas STCs {were news?}, Crude Dude commented that you could get 100LL for about 2 cent per gallon more than mogas.
That was certainly true when mogas was 25 cents wholesale. But that’s been a long while, now… 40+ years? Today, Avgas sells at the refinery gate at 80 cents to $1/gallon more than mogas. But then, there are many other costs/taxes/fees involved between the refinery and the the wingtip.
jet would tend to be higher relative to avgas in the winter, and the opposite in the summer.
There’s certainly seasonality in distillate pricing. But, there’s seasonality in gasoline pricing, too! Gasoline demand is much higher in the summer, and avgas is typically priced off mogas posted prices, and so… TWO reasons for distillates and gasoline to swing against each other, winter versus summer. (High distillate demand in winter, high gasoline demand in summer.)
The process to make gasoline from heavier petroleum compounds started just before WW2
The article you quote disagrees with your simplification! Houdry cracking was a breakthrough, as it was catalytic cracking that improved efficiency (I don’t think there’s any Houdry crackers still operating). But thermal cracking was around since the 1890s, and is mentioned in your referenced article… The refinery I last worked in began construction in 1899, and was considered a marvel… 14,400 barrels per day (over 600,000 gallons per day) of thermal cracking capacity… the largest in the world at the turn of the century. I got to watch the last of those being torn down early in my career…
Can you put {mogas, autoMOtive GASoline} in a single piston that uses 100LL? I’ve seen some companies selling STCs, but it seems like a certificate only, does anything need to be done to the engine?
Only lower compression engines, typically *less* than 1/2 horsepower per cubic inch of displacement, are approved for mogas. Typically, there are no engine modifications. Low wing aircraft sometimes require fuel boost pumps to avoid vapor locking.
Paul