I can run E-Free 93 Octane mogas but alas! it's not found anywhere near me. Barnwell is listed on the Pure-Gas web site as having 93 AKI but that's incorrect unless something has changed since I've been there.
But when going cross-country 100LL is the only option for almost all flights.
Remember, 100LL is produced in such small quantities that it's not considered a fuel by the petroleum companies, it's a "specialty chemical."
Although removing leaded fuel is an EPA priority, they recognize that >99% of this was accomplished when they did a way with leaded fuel in cars. The reality is we aren't producing enough lead to truly matter. Would it be better if we went unleaded? Sure, no doubt. How much? Probably not enough to justify the effort that's gone into switching. I was working on this problem over 10 years ago, and it doesn't seem to have moved much in that timeframe.
Remember, 100LL is produced in such small quantities that it's not considered a fuel by the petroleum companies, it's a "specialty chemical."
Although removing leaded fuel is an EPA priority, they recognize that >99% of this was accomplished when they did a way with leaded fuel in cars. The reality is we aren't producing enough lead to truly matter. Would it be better if we went unleaded? Sure, no doubt. How much? Probably not enough to justify the effort that's gone into switching. I was working on this problem over 10 years ago, and it doesn't seem to have moved much in that timeframe.
Lot's of info on this thread here: https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/no-lead-aviation-fuel.129663/page-3
Tim
The reality is there's not a good reason to make 100LL go away,
As I mentioned before, 100LL is under threat from two directions, environmental concerns and market forces. Given thatRemember, 100LL is produced in such small quantities that it's not considered a fuel by the petroleum companies, it's a "specialty chemical."
Although removing leaded fuel is an EPA priority, they recognize that >99% of this was accomplished when they did a way with leaded fuel in cars. The reality is we aren't producing enough lead to truly matter. Would it be better if we went unleaded? Sure, no doubt. How much? Probably not enough to justify the effort that's gone into switching. I was working on this problem over 10 years ago, and it doesn't seem to have moved much in that timeframe.
As I mentioned before, 100LL is under threat from two directions, environmental concerns and market forces. Given that
we need to be prepared for Capitalism to sneak up and kill off 100LL before Environmentalism has a chance to.
- 100LL fussy to produce, ship, and store;
- the customer base is minuscule (by oil-industry standards); and
- the supply chain is dangerously thin and fragile
Any avgas fuel will:
- Be a fussy to produce, ship and store specialty application product;
- Continue to have a minuscule customer base (that's likely to keep shrinking slowly); and
- Due to bullets 1 & 2 above have a thin supply chain.
Lots of info in the other thread. Per Paul, and a Google search with questionable results (as in I did not source verification), depending on how you calculate it, avgas represents between 25 and 50% of the lead added to our airborne environment. The reality is there is no safe level of lead exposure. Hence the push to remove it.I guess I'm not sure what your point is, at least to me specifically as I saw that thread and didn't find much particularly useful in there. I literally worked this problem as part of my day job for some time and I don't feel I'm being arrogant in saying I understand it better than most people on here. The reality is there's not a good reason to make 100LL go away, but I do think that Jet-A powerplants are more logical going forward for a number of reasons.
However, I would truly hate to see old warbirds be relegated to display only. That would be a shame.
Lots of info in the other thread. Per Paul, and a Google search with questionable results (as in I did not source verification), depending on how you calculate it, avgas represents between 25 and 50% of the lead added to our airborne environment. The reality is there is no safe level of lead exposure. Hence the push to remove it.
The manufacturing limitations are covered in the other thread also....
Ted,
I do not know enough to debate this well. Except to say, I have read multiple studies that show lead in cities near construction and near GA airports are significantly higher.
This matters for kids, not so much for adults. The effect lead has on kids is far greater than on adults, so safety levels for adult workplaces are rather meaningless.
Tim
Sent from my HD1907 using Tapatalk
Not true to the same extent. If the gas does not contain lead, they won't need to keep the entire infrastructure -- pipes, tanks, trucks, etc -- separate (they can wash them out and use them for something else the next round). That means that more refineries might be willing to produce it. In fact, it might even be possible to put in any anti-detonation additives closer to the consumer (TEL is too toxic for, say, a regional distributor to handle before it's diluted in the avgas). And, perhaps most importantly, we won't be relying on the one remaining chemical plant in Manchester UK that makes TEL (and would probably like to stop, for all the public-relations grief it brings them).Any avgas fuel will:
- Be a fussy to produce, ship and store specialty application product;
- Continue to have a minuscule customer base (that's likely to keep shrinking slowly); and
- Due to bullets 1 & 2 above have a thin supply chain.
There was an AOPA story a while ago that said 70% of general aviation aircraft could run on auto gas, but the 30% of aircraft with higher performance engines that needs the higher octane provided by the TEL also consume 70% of the 100LL. It also said the oil industry refines more auto gas in a day than a year's worth of 100LL production.
Because TEL is highly toxic in concentration (vs when it's diluted in avgas). When they first started adding it to fuel in the 1920s, workers at the Standard Oil refinery in NJ were suffering severe cognitive impairment and sometimes dying — they nicknamed it "looney gas". It has to be handled in a highly-controlled environment.Why not just sell bottles of it that can be added by the operator?
Used to be you could buy it in bottles at your local auto parts store.Why not just sell bottles of it that can be added by the operator?
I find that curious, especially with the recent boom in flight training. The 172s, 150s, DA-20s, etc used for training are at the pumps several times a day each, while most of the privately-owned, higher-performance planes seem to spend most of their time tied down (maybe venturing over once or twice a month for fuel).There was an AOPA story a while ago that said 70% of general aviation aircraft could run on auto gas, but the 30% of aircraft with higher performance engines that needs the higher octane provided by the TEL also consume 70% of the 100LL. It also said the oil industry refines more auto gas in a day than a year's worth of 100LL production.
I find that curious, especially with the recent boom in flight training. The 172s, 150s, DA-20s, etc used for training are at the pumps several times a day each, while most of the privately-owned, higher-performance planes seem to spend most of their time tied down (maybe venturing over once or twice a month for fuel).
Then again, maybe AOPA collected that data 8–10 years ago, when training was in a major slump, before there were year-long waiting lists for flying lessons.
Used to be you could buy it in bottles at your local auto parts store.
You sure about that? I remember "octane booster", but it wasn't TEL or a TEL blend. I think it was a manganese formulation suspended in Naptha or alcohol, which is mostly what you can buy today.
@Bob Noel
Note: I found these via a web search. Beyond the rather obvious one sided agenda, I have not looked into any aspect of the information.
Here are two rather one sided sites that attempt to answer your question:
https://close1d2.org/lead-poisoning/
https://www.smgov.net/uploadedFiles/Departments/Airport/News_and_Litigation/Friends of the Earth Report Regarding Lead Fuel.pdf
Tim
. . .
the little propeller planes buzzing over Orlando’s downtown neighborhoods, a fleet of gas-powered aircraft numbering in the tens of thousands is the nation’s biggest source of lead pollution, eclipsing metal processors, waste incinerators, battery makers and other industries.
“When emitted from aircraft exhaust, lead can be inhaled by people living near and working at airports,” said the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in its January release of a report to Congress: “Options for Reducing Lead Emissions from Piston-Engine Aircraft.”
Sorry. It is a rather long article. I don't want to paste the whole thing. Suffice to say, it was a front page article on the Orlando Sentinel with a big picture above the fold and fairly large type headline. And we are going to be hearing about this more and more in the coming months and years.Available to subscribers only