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Say What?

 
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Vanremog(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 04, 2008 10:46 pm    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

Lycoming announces this.

Recognizing global concerns about the immediate and long-term availability of aviation-grade 100LL fuel, Lycoming Engines announced this week that it is working to get approval for the use of unleaded automotive gasoline for its standard-compression-ratio O-360 and IO-360 product lines. Ian Walsh, general manager for Lycoming Engines, told AVweb the approval will not require any modification to the engines, the fuel will not need any additives or special treatment, and there will be no degradation in engine performance. "It's essentially a paperwork drill, to make this happen," he said. He expects to have approval from the FAA by this fall, but owners cannot implement the change until the airplane also gets certified. That is up to the manufacturers, Walsh said, and he could not estimate how long that would take, but said it is also essentially a paperwork issue. The engines will require a specific type of unleaded 93 AKI automotive gas, designated as Euro Norm EN228 (in Europe) or ASTM D4814 (in the U.S.). This fuel is not difficult to find, Walsh said, but users must verify that they are getting that particular type -- not just any unleaded auto gas will do.


The unleaded automotive gas is generally cheaper than avgas and provides an alternative in areas where avgas is scarce. Also, the continuing use of leaded avgas provokes environmental concerns. The popular O-360 and IO-360 engines are found on many GA aircraft, including Cessnas, Mooneys, Diamonds, and more.
This makes it sound like a slam dunk. Can it really be this easy?


N1GV (RV-6A, Flying 895hrs, O-360-A1A, C/S, Silicon Valley)

Get trade secrets for amazing burgers. Watch "Cooking with Tyler Florence" on AOL Food.
[quote][b]


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jmsears(at)adelphia.net
Guest





PostPosted: Thu Jun 05, 2008 2:35 am    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

Gee, golly. I've been flying on mogas since 1986. The
big difference is that the manufacturer is actually saying
it can run on it, now. I don't know what one has to do to
prove fuel meets their standard; but, it may be a nothing
thing to do. I also don't know what their feelings are
concerning mogas with a little ethanol in it. I guess I've
flown over 1900 logged hours behind engines running on
auto gas. My airplanes haven't crashed and burned,
yet.

With the price of gas, these days, manufacturers have to
do something to make it easier for us. Otherwise, their
market will shrink more than it already has. I've logged very
little time in my RV, this year. I've used the money saved
to help feed our other vehicles. Selling my RV may be my
next move. At $30+ per hour fuel cost, it's getting a bit out
of line for my meager fixed income.

Jim Sears in KY
RV-6A N198JS
EAA Tech Counselor
[quote] ---


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timb



Joined: 16 Apr 2008
Posts: 77
Location: Frankston, Texas

PostPosted: Thu Jun 05, 2008 4:11 am    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

Hi Jim,

I would be interested to know what criteria you use for auto fuel in your RV-6. Do you check for ethanol first? Are you using premium? Did you do anything special to the tanks, lines, carb to be able to use this without concern?

I am running only avgas in my RV-6 for 100 hours now but would love to be comfortable using auto fuel.

I tried to take this off line, but it bounced back from your email addy.

[b]Tim Bryan[/b]
[b]RV-6 Flying[/b]
[b]N616TB 100 hours now[/b]


From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Jim Sears
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 5:27 AM
To: rv-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Say What?


Gee, golly. I've been flying on mogas since 1986. The

big difference is that the manufacturer is actually saying

it can run on it, now. I don't know what one has to do to

prove fuel meets their standard; but, it may be a nothing

thing to do. I also don't know what their feelings are

concerning mogas with a little ethanol in it. I guess I've

flown over 1900 logged hours behind engines running on

auto gas. My airplanes haven't crashed and burned,

yet.



With the price of gas, these days, manufacturers have to

do something to make it easier for us. Otherwise, their

market will shrink more than it already has. I've logged very

little time in my RV, this year. I've used the money saved

to help feed our other vehicles. Selling my RV may be my

next move. At $30+ per hour fuel cost, it's getting a bit out

of line for my meager fixed income.



Jim Sears in KY

RV-6A N198JS

EAA Tech Counselor
[quote]
---


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Tim Bryan
RV-6 Flying
N616TB
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pitts_pilot(at)bellsouth.
Guest





PostPosted: Thu Jun 05, 2008 5:48 am    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

Tim Bryan wrote:
Quote:
v\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} o\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} w\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} .shape {behavior:url(#default#VML);} <![endif]--> st1\:*{behavior:url(#default#ieooui) } <![endif]--> <![endif]--> <![endif]-->
Hi Jim,
I'm not Jim, but like him have been a mogas user for years.
Quote:

I would be interested to know what criteria you use for auto fuel in your RV-6.
I use mogas in my AA-1B (O-235-C2C) and my Pitts (O-360-A4A). It was economics in the AA-1B, but it was the lead fouling problem in the Pitts. For 13 years I hand-propped the Pitts, and lead fouling meant far more exercise.
Quote:

Do you check for ethanol first?
In Florida, pumps with alcohol were required to post whether or not alcohol was present. Within the last month, pumps started sporting a placard that said "may contain up to 10% or less ethanol". Which means we have to test for it. This is problematic for me. If I test regular .... both planes will run on regular, but the Pitts will ping on it when the engine gets hot during aerobatics so I typically use high test ...... and there's alcohol, I can put in my vehicle and search elsewhere. If I'm looking for high test, then I'll just have to pay the few pennies for the fuel I tested. Gonna look funny on the credit card.

To further make my life miserable, our governor is working on a bill to mandate the use of alcohol. Crap!!!
Quote:

Are you using premium?
Only in the Pitts.
Quote:

Did you do anything special to the tanks, lines, carb to be able to use this without concern?
There should always be concern. Early on (in the early 80's) before the signage requirement, I got some alcohol laced mogas that went into the Pitts. It has a PS-5 pressure carburetor that operates on pressure differences on many diaphragms. The alcohol ate the old black diaphragms causing them to crack and leak. After spending a lot of my mogas money on the rebuild (with red silicone diaphragms) the alcohol problem went away ..... until now.
Quote:

I am running only avgas in my RV-6 for 100 hours now but would love to be comfortable using auto fuel.
Jim will have to reply to that one (RV-6), but you need to do the soul searching yourself. In this case your mileage MAY differ. I've known some RV pilots that had issues with vapor pressure in THEIR airplane. I've known a whole lot more with NO issues with mogas.
Quote:

I tried to take this off line, but it bounced back from your email addy.
I think this discussion should be left to the forum. There are a lot more mogas users out there with experience and opinions that are invaluable in this discussion. I hope they chime in.

As an aside, the STCs in place for the certified aircraft prohibit alcohol in the mogas (and Lycoming does too in its new press release) for good reason. It attacks rubber and is corrosive to aluminum (and will soften proseal over time). How corrosive I don't know. Hell, air is corrosive to aluminum!!! Without alcohol (in the fuel, of course!), I have no qualms about using it ...... and will probably experiment with high test in my RV-10 when it flies.

Best of luck Tim ..... and we're all gonna need it in the fuel wars .....
Linn ..... just one data point
[quote]


[b]Tim Bryan[/b]
[b]RV-6 Flying[/b]

[b]


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bmeyette



Joined: 14 Mar 2007
Posts: 72
Location: Cornish, NH

PostPosted: Thu Jun 05, 2008 8:58 am    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

The problem I see with this is that it seems to be getting more & more difficult find auto fuel that isn’t at least 10% ethanol




From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Vanremog(at)aol.com
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 2:40 AM
To: rv-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Say What?


Lycoming announces this.



Recognizing global concerns about the immediate and long-term availability of aviation-grade 100LL fuel, Lycoming Engines [b]announced[/b] this week that it is working to get approval for the use of unleaded automotive gasoline for its standard-compression-ratio O-360 and IO-360 product lines. Ian Walsh, general manager for Lycoming Engines, told AVweb the approval will not require any modification to the engines, the fuel will not need any additives or special treatment, and there will be no degradation in engine performance. "It's essentially a paperwork drill, to make this happen," he said. He expects to have approval from the FAA by this fall, but owners cannot implement the change until the airplane also gets certified. That is up to the manufacturers, Walsh said, and he could not estimate how long that would take, but said it is also essentially a paperwork issue. The engines will require a specific type of unleaded 93 AKI automotive gas, designated as Euro Norm EN228 (in Europe) or ASTM D4814 (in the U.S.). This fuel is not difficult to find, Walsh said, but users must verify that they are getting that particular type -- not just any unleaded auto gas will do.
The unleaded automotive gas is generally cheaper than avgas and provides an alternative in areas where avgas is scarce. Also, the continuing use of leaded avgas provokes environmental concerns. The popular O-360 and IO-360 engines are found on many GA aircraft, including Cessnas, Mooneys, Diamonds, and more.
This makes it sound like a slam dunk. Can it really be this easy?




N1GV (RV-6A, Flying 895hrs, O-360-A1A, C/S, Silicon Valley)





Get trade secrets for amazing burgers. Watch "Cooking with Tyler Florence" on AOL Food.

Quote:


href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV-List
href="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/c
No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG. Release Date: 6/3/2008 7:31 PM Checked by AVG. Release Date: 6/4/2008 4:40 PM [quote][b]


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_________________
Brian Meyette, Cornish, NH

RV-7A QB tipup, supercharged Subaru STi engine, MT CS prop, all glass day/night/IFR panel, being built with solar and wind power

N432MM

http://brian76.mystarband.net/RV-7Ahome.htm
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Kellym



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1705
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Thu Jun 05, 2008 8:05 pm    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

Note that the ASTM std they chose does permit alcohol. Also beware that mogas is a solvent for at least the older varieties of PRC sealant. Some folks that tried using it in older Mooneys soon developed significant fuel leaks.

Brian Meyette wrote: [quote] v\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} o\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} w\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} .shape {behavior:url(#default#VML);} <![endif]--> st1\:*{behavior:url(#default#ieooui) } <![endif]-->
The problem I see with this is that it seems to be getting more & more difficult find auto fuel that isn’t at least 10% ethanol
 
 
 

From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com (owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com) [mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com (owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com)] On Behalf Of Vanremog(at)aol.com (Vanremog(at)aol.com)
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 2:40 AM
To: rv-list(at)matronics.com (rv-list(at)matronics.com)
Subject: Say What?

 
Lycoming announces this.

 

Recognizing global concerns about the immediate and long-term availability of aviation-grade 100LL fuel, Lycoming Engines [b]announced[/b] this week that it is working to get approval for the use of unleaded automotive gasoline for its standard-compression-ratio O-360 and IO-360 product lines. Ian Walsh, general manager for Lycoming Engines, told AVweb the approval will not require any modification to the engines, the fuel will not need any additives or special treatment, and there will be no degradation in engine performance. "It's essentially a paperwork drill, to make this happen," he said. He expects to have approval from the FAA by this fall, but owners cannot implement the change until the airplane also gets certified. That is up to the manufacturers, Walsh said, and he could not estimate how long that would take, but said it is also essentially a paperwork issue. The engines will require a specific type of unleaded 93 AKI automotive gas, designated as Euro Norm EN228 (in Europe) or ASTM D4814 (in the U.S.). This fuel is not difficult to find, Walsh said, but users must verify that they are getting that particular type -- not just any unleaded auto gas will do.
The unleaded automotive gas is generally cheaper than avgas and provides an alternative in areas where avgas is scarce. Also, the continuing use of leaded avgas provokes environmental concerns. The popular O-360 and IO-360 engines are found on many GA aircraft, including Cessnas, Mooneys, Diamonds, and more.
This makes it sound like a slam dunk.  Can it really be this easy?
 

 

N1GV (RV-6A, Flying 895hrs, O-360-A1A, C/S, Silicon Valley)



[b]


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Kelly McMullen
A&P/IA, EAA Tech Counselor # 5286
KCHD
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timb



Joined: 16 Apr 2008
Posts: 77
Location: Frankston, Texas

PostPosted: Fri Jun 06, 2008 4:50 am    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

Hi Linn,

Great info to ponder, Thanks for your comments!
Do Not Archive

[b]Tim Bryan[/b]
[b]RV-6 Flying[/b]
[b]N616TB almost 100 hours now[/b]


From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of linn Walters
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 8:42 AM
To: rv-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Say What?


Tim Bryan wrote:
<![endif]--> <![endif]-->Hi Jim,
I'm not Jim, but like him have been a mogas user for years.
I would be interested to know what criteria you use for auto fuel in your RV-6.
I use mogas in my AA-1B (O-235-C2C) and my Pitts (O-360-A4A). It was economics in the AA-1B, but it was the lead fouling problem in the Pitts. For 13 years I hand-propped the Pitts, and lead fouling meant far more exercise.


Do you check for ethanol first?
In Florida, pumps with alcohol were required to post whether or not alcohol was present. Within the last month, pumps started sporting a placard that said "may contain up to 10% or less ethanol". Which means we have to test for it. This is problematic for me. If I test regular .... both planes will run on regular, but the Pitts will ping on it when the engine gets hot during aerobatics so I typically use high test ....... and there's alcohol, I can put in my vehicle and search elsewhere. If I'm looking for high test, then I'll just have to pay the few pennies for the fuel I tested. Gonna look funny on the credit card.

To further make my life miserable, our governor is working on a bill to mandate the use of alcohol. Crap!!!


Are you using premium?
Only in the Pitts.


Did you do anything special to the tanks, lines, carb to be able to use this without concern?
There should always be concern. Early on (in the early 80's) before the signage requirement, I got some alcohol laced mogas that went into the Pitts. It has a PS-5 pressure carburetor that operates on pressure differences on many diaphragms. The alcohol ate the old black diaphragms causing them to crack and leak. After spending a lot of my mogas money on the rebuild (with red silicone diaphragms) the alcohol problem went away ..... until now.
I am running only avgas in my RV-6 for 100 hours now but would love to be comfortable using auto fuel.
Jim will have to reply to that one (RV-6), but you need to do the soul searching yourself. In this case your mileage MAY differ. I've known some RV pilots that had issues with vapor pressure in THEIR airplane. I've known a whole lot more with NO issues with mogas.
I tried to take this off line, but it bounced back from your email addy.
I think this discussion should be left to the forum. There are a lot more mogas users out there with experience and opinions that are invaluable in this discussion. I hope they chime in.

As an aside, the STCs in place for the certified aircraft prohibit alcohol in the mogas (and Lycoming does too in its new press release) for good reason. It attacks rubber and is corrosive to aluminum (and will soften proseal over time). How corrosive I don't know. Hell, air is corrosive to aluminum!!! Without alcohol (in the fuel, of course!), I have no qualms about using it ...... and will probably experiment with high test in my RV-10 when it flies.

Best of luck Tim ..... and we're all gonna need it in the fuel wars .....
Linn ..... just one data point



[b]Tim Bryan[/b]
[b]RV-6 Flying[/b]

Quote:
http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV-List
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[quote][b]


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_________________
Tim Bryan
RV-6 Flying
N616TB
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AV8ORJWC



Joined: 13 Jul 2006
Posts: 1149
Location: Aurora, Oregon "Home of VANS"

PostPosted: Fri Jun 06, 2008 5:21 pm    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

No, ethanol additions will undermine the effort.



John Cox



From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com
[mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of
Vanremog(at)aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2008 11:40 PM
To: rv-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Say What?



Lycoming announces this.



Recognizing global concerns about the immediate and long-term
availability of aviation-grade 100LL fuel, Lycoming Engines announced
<http://www.lycoming.com/news-and-events/press-releases/release-06-02-08
.jsp> this week that it is working to get approval for the use of
unleaded automotive gasoline for its standard-compression-ratio O-360
and IO-360 product lines. Ian Walsh, general manager for Lycoming
Engines, told AVweb the approval will not require any modification to
the engines, the fuel will not need any additives or special treatment,
and there will be no degradation in engine performance. "It's
essentially a paperwork drill, to make this happen," he said. He expects
to have approval from the FAA by this fall, but owners cannot implement
the change until the airplane also gets certified. That is up to the
manufacturers, Walsh said, and he could not estimate how long that would
take, but said it is also essentially a paperwork issue. The engines
will require a specific type of unleaded 93 AKI automotive gas,
designated as Euro Norm EN228 (in Europe) or ASTM D4814 (in the U.S.).
This fuel is not difficult to find, Walsh said, but users must verify
that they are getting that particular type -- not just any unleaded auto
gas will do.

The unleaded automotive gas is generally cheaper than avgas and provides
an alternative in areas where avgas is scarce. Also, the continuing use
of leaded avgas provokes environmental concerns. The popular O-360 and
IO-360 engines are found on many GA aircraft, including Cessnas,
Mooneys, Diamonds, and more.

This makes it sound like a slam dunk. Can it really be this easy?





N1GV (RV-6A, Flying 895hrs, O-360-A1A, C/S, Silicon Valley)

________________________________

Get trade secrets for amazing burgers. Watch "Cooking with Tyler
Florence" on AOL Food
<http://food.aol.com/tyler-florence?video=4?&NCID=aolfod00030000000002>


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
Guest





PostPosted: Fri Jun 06, 2008 6:28 pm    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

What many people want is for some 'authority' to tell them that 'x' has
been tested & it's either ok or not. Unfortunately, all we can get in
the short term is anecdotes (data points with incomplete info on the
parameters).

Point: The same authority (Lyc) that spent the last 3 decades telling us
that mogas will kill us all is suddenly, with clear knowledge of the
risk of lawsuits, telling us that it's perfectly ok. (Kinda makes you
feel like the runup to the Iraq war...)

Point: Several corn belt RV's have been flying with supposedly stock
lycs on almost pure ethanol for many years (over a decade, I think).
Point: In 1990, I visited a small airport across the river from Natchez
MS in the 160HP Thorp T-18 I owned at the time. When I asked for fuel,
the lineman asked if I wanted avgas or mogas. I said that since I had
the 160 hp engine, I'd better get avgas. He responded that he'd been
feeding his 160 hp Tripacer a steady diet of mogas for at least a decade
with no problems.
Point: A few times in the past, I've run mogas regular in my current 160
hp RV-4 when we were out of avgas on the field. The plane has limited
engine instrumentation, but it seemed to run with noticeably higher CHT
& oil temp and I could never get totally comfortable with how it 'felt'
at cruise.

Point: During one of our more recent outages, I decided to try mogas
premium, 1st mixed with avgas & eventually just the premium mogas. The
engine runs *much* better on premium mogas. With avgas, plugs are fouled
at every startup. (Sub-data point: I lean aggressively & consistently as
soon as I pull power back after climbout.) With premium, plugs are
always clean at startup. (This is a 1700hr+ SMOH engine with compression
in the high 70's but blowing about 1 qt of oil past the chrome
cylinders & out the breather every 3 hrs.) It runs great! No
intermittent 'auto-rough' like I get on avgas. No noticeable evidence of
running hot. The only problem is that premium is pushing $4.20/gal now &
we have a 10,000 gallon supply of avgas that was mistakenly delivered to
a neighbor's ag operation at $3.60/gal. What's a mother to do??

Hope these data points are helpful.

Charlie

Tim Bryan wrote:
Quote:

Hi Linn,



Great info to ponder, Thanks for your comments!

Do Not Archive



**Tim Bryan**

**RV-6 Flying**

**N616TB almost 100 hours now**

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*From:* owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com
[mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com] *On Behalf Of *linn Walters
*Sent:* Thursday, June 05, 2008 8:42 AM
*To:* rv-list(at)matronics.com
*Subject:* Re: Say What?



Tim Bryan wrote:

Hi Jim,

I'm not Jim, but like him have been a mogas user for years.

I would be interested to know what criteria you use for auto fuel in
your RV-6.

I use mogas in my AA-1B (O-235-C2C) and my Pitts (O-360-A4A). It was
economics in the AA-1B, but it was the lead fouling problem in the
Pitts. For 13 years I hand-propped the Pitts, and lead fouling meant
far more exercise.

Do you check for ethanol first?

In Florida, pumps with alcohol were required to post whether or not
alcohol was present. Within the last month, pumps started sporting a
placard that said "may contain up to 10% or less ethanol". Which means
we have to test for it. This is problematic for me. If I test
regular ..... both planes will run on regular, but the Pitts will ping
on it when the engine gets hot during aerobatics so I typically use
high test ....... and there's alcohol, I can put in my vehicle and
search elsewhere. If I'm looking for high test, then I'll just have
to pay the few pennies for the fuel I tested. Gonna look funny on the
credit card.

To further make my life miserable, our governor is working on a bill
to mandate the use of alcohol. Crap!!!

Are you using premium?

Only in the Pitts.

Did you do anything special to the tanks, lines, carb to be able to
use this without concern?

There should always be concern. Early on (in the early 80's) before
the signage requirement, I got some alcohol laced mogas that went into
the Pitts. It has a PS-5 pressure carburetor that operates on
pressure differences on many diaphragms. The alcohol ate the old
black diaphragms causing them to crack and leak. After spending a lot
of my mogas money on the rebuild (with red silicone diaphragms) the
alcohol problem went away ..... until now.

I am running only avgas in my RV-6 for 100 hours now but would love to
be comfortable using auto fuel.

Jim will have to reply to that one (RV-6), but you need to do the soul
searching yourself. In this case your mileage MAY differ. I've known
some RV pilots that had issues with vapor pressure in THEIR airplane.
I've known a whole lot more with NO issues with mogas.

I tried to take this off line, but it bounced back from your email addy.

I think this discussion should be left to the forum. There are a lot
more mogas users out there with experience and opinions that are
invaluable in this discussion. I hope they chime in.

As an aside, the STCs in place for the certified aircraft prohibit
alcohol in the mogas (and Lycoming does too in its new press release)
for good reason. It attacks rubber and is corrosive to aluminum (and
will soften proseal over time). How corrosive I don't know. Hell,
air is corrosive to aluminum!!! Without alcohol (in the fuel, of
course!), I have no qualms about using it ...... and will probably
experiment with high test in my RV-10 when it flies.

Best of luck Tim ..... and we're all gonna need it in the fuel wars
......
Linn ..... just one data point



**Tim Bryan**

**RV-6 Flying**



* *
* *
**
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JFLEISC(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 07, 2008 3:19 am    Post subject: Say What? Reply with quote

In a message dated 6/6/2008 10:30:42 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, ceengland(at)bellsouth.net writes:
Quote:
eventually just the premium mogas. The
engine runs *much* better on premium mogas. With avgas, plugs are fouled
at every startup. (Sub-data point: I lean aggressively & consistently as
soon as I pull power back after climbout.) With premium, plugs are
always clean at startup. (This is a 1700hr+ SMOH engine with compression
in the high 70's but blowing about 1 qt of oil past the chrome
cylinders & out the breather every 3 hrs.) It runs great! No
intermittent 'auto-rough' like I get on avgas. No noticeable evidence of
running hot.

My experience exactly.

Jim



Get trade secrets for amazing burgers. Watch "Cooking with Tyler Florence" on AOL Food.
[quote][b]


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n395v



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 450

PostPosted: Sat Jun 07, 2008 5:20 am    Post subject: Re: Say What? Reply with quote

Quote:
(Kinda makes you
feel like the runup to the Iraq war...)

If you are a liberal running for national office
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