Click the link. This is why we should be modifying some auto fuel STC's to make ethanol legal.
http://e85vehicles.com/e85/index.php?to ... n#msg18969
shorton wrote:I don't guess I understand what this is supposed to prove, all this shows is that an electrical armiture stayed cleaner in alchahol than in gas, what does that have to do with the fact that alchahol holds water, attacks and destroys the older rubber compounds, can attack and destroy some aluminum and other alloys and procuces far less power than gas?
Reports this season from boat mechanics is that they are seeing a lot of corroded fuel injectors already. On Lake Pend Oreille, disabled boats (meaning; THE ENGINE QUIT RUNNING
) much higher than in the past. However, maybe 180's are not injected so hopefully it won't cause those kinds of issues for Marty.180Marty wrote:Click the link. This is why we should be modifying some auto fuel STC's to make ethanol legal.
http://e85vehicles.com/e85/index.php?to ... n#msg18969
dirtstrip wrote:... There is a second generation ethanol derivative based fuel that contains no ethanol itself but has been developed and tested by a company called Swift Fuels and partnered in testing with Teledyne Continental.
Very promising, and now I need to say thank you to all who supported ethanol through its infancy so this could be developed as cellulosic second generation renewable avgas and it can be made from feed stock that is not food based. But until FAA standards are set we will need some 100LL and some 93 octane unleaded for our buzzards. Even Big Food should like this.
The company is betting that its renewable general aviation fuel, made from landfill waste, sorghum, algae and wood chips, among other feedstocks, will provide one small solution to America’s big energy crisis.
180Marty wrote:1593Y, I met you at Oshkosh 2 years ago when Joe Norris was talking about the future of avgas.
The Swift fuel guy was there also after Joe's talk. I believe they do use an ethanol plant to make their fuel by doing something different.
Also, how many years does it take for the fuel system to fail if using 10% ethanol?
I,m curious.Here is a quote about Swift fuel. It could be considered cellulosic depending on feedstock.The company is betting that its renewable general aviation fuel, made from landfill waste, sorghum, algae and wood chips, among other feedstocks, will provide one small solution to America’s big energy crisis.
I don't understand your question. The fuel system of what?
They are adamant that their fuel process has absolutely nothing to do with ethanol and is NOT a second generation ethanol derivative.
dirtstrip wrote:TCM, Hawker Beech Corporation partners with Swift fuel for testing and demonstration flights.
MOBILE, AL – Teledyne Continental Motors Inc. (TCM), in collaboration with Hawker Beechcraft Corporation (HBC) and Swift Enterprises, announced the successful first test flight of a certified aircraft using Swift Fuel as the exclusive fuel source. Engineering teams had already completed hundreds of hours of laboratory testing and test cell trials used to simulate various operational conditions.
"The Swift Fuel test flight occurred just two weeks after TCM successfully flew on 94UL.
"The basis of developing the ideal replacement for 100LL began with a plan to meet the ASTM D-910 specification for fuel by using a non-food renewable resource," says John Ziulkowski, Vice President of Renewable Fuels for Swift Enterprises. ..."
dirtstrip wrote:Swift fuel is not the only unleaded avgas currently being produced. Sweden has an unleaded avgas replacement for 100LL that meets that the ASTM D-910 spec and has been in use by their Air Force since 1981 and before unleaded autogas was available. It is commercially available and used 25 airports in the country but pilots by their conservative nature are slow to pick up on something new.
http://www.vintagebonanza.com/Fuel_UL-91-96.htm
Question: Is lead really a requirement of the spec. or not. The specs I read on BP and Shell 100 LL avgas list only the max limit of lead contained in the fuel but not the minimum. It may be that some lead must be there to qualify under the spec but the Swedish product has such small a quantity as only to meet the requirement of its presence under the D-910 spec.
Hard to say what we will put in our aircraft then.
Stol wrote:This fuel thing is going to get ugly.. NASCAR has been running unleaded for 18 months and not one issue. The fix for planes is not a hard obsticle to over come from the engine standpoint. It's the friggin paperwork... You would think the tens of thousands of auto gas stc's could adapt this http://www.nascar.com/2006/news/headlin ... index.html.
>... On a side note, I am currently running premium auto fuel from Smiths grocery store, delievered by Flying J. last batch tested 12% ethanol, Flew it up to 17,500 msl and not a hint of vaporlock or detonation... So. It can be done........
dirtstrip wrote:>... If a Swedish fuel exists that meets the ASTM D-910 standard but is not seeming to take off, I don't think it's about meeting the standard anymore. Maybe it just can't gain the same level of acceptance as long as there is 100LL to compete with because darned few people want to be first to change. Obviously there can't be that many planes that can't stand a drop of 4 points in octane.
It may just be time to pull life support on the 100LL and see if that "intermediate blend" will fly. I bet it does and I bet the bureaucrats take a kicking until the regs get changed and Swift gets some help to fight its way out of the paper bag they are in.
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