I said:
With the money I've put into the engine, however, I would not even consider running mogas, and in any event there is no STC for it.
My primary hesitancy in running mogas is that there is no STC allowing it. That means that my engine hasn't been approved for it. So I'm not going to go play games with running slightly cheaper gas and risk the $23,000 that my engine cost me, to save $1.50/gallon (the difference between Shell mogas locally and 100LL). The cost/benefit ratio just isn't there.
I average slightly over 60 hours per year (62 last year), and at 9.8 gph (which is accurate for cruise, although for just flitting around I burn less), I'll burn 588 gallons or so and it'll cost me $882 or so extra per year on 100LL. To save that amount, I'll have to find a source of unadulterated (i.e., no MTBE, no ethanol) mogas (hard to do in Colorado), arrange for it to be transported to the airport safely, and have the necessary pump, etc., to put it in my airplane. Guaranteed that I can't keep 100 gallons in my hangar without incurring the ire of airport management. I have no idea what a tanker trailer and pump, etc. would cost, but likely a lot more than what I'd save unless it were amortized over a lot of years--and then it would still cost me to haul the fuel from wherever I was able to purchase it.
Alternatively, I could fly down to Longmont, CO, to refuel with mogas at the airport at a savings of $.45/gal. Round trip I'd burn probably 6 gallons. So let's say I timed it right to buy 40 gallons, which means I'd save $18 on the fillup, but it would cost me $28.50 to fly there and back. Or I could go to Limon, CO, and save an additional $.80/gal. That way, if I bought 40 gallons, I could save $50 on the fillup, and it would cost me $56 to fly there and back. So far as I can determine, those are the only places around with mogas at the airport.
Bottom line is that there's either no savings but instead additional expense for me to burn mogas in my airplane, which has no mogas STC anyway.
Cary