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Avgas Alternatives

By Steve Ells / Published: Feb 15, 2011
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Avgas

As 100LL comes under fire, the industry
searches for lead-free avgas alternatives.

Modifications must be implemented at the production plants, but George Braly, chief engineer at GAMI, said the fuel can be made with components "that are found inside the fence of any refinery." Braly predicted a price of $5 to $6 a gallon for G100UL, the company's replacement fuel. Braly added, "G100UL can be made at any of the seven or eight refineries around the country that produce 100LL avgas."

Swift Technologies of West Lafayette, Indiana, has a different plan. The Swift formulation is a binary (two-part) fuel consisting mostly of mesitylene mixed with a small amount of isopentane (2-methylbutane). The difference is that the Swift supply of mesitylene will be extracted from biomass through a catalytic process developed by John Rusek, who has a doctoral degree in chemical engineering and atomic physics, and Jon Ziulkowski, vice president of renewable fuels at Swift. The production process has been proved on a small scale.

Mary Rusek, spouse and partner, said that one of the advantages of Swift fuel is that it can be made from local biomass such as "wood chips in the Northwest, sorghum in the South or sugar beets from Maine." Rusek also said that Swift already has signed letters of intent from five out of the six oil companies to distribute 100SF.

"We have plans on paper where we would take an ex-ethanol plant, make a few changes and produce our fuel," Rusek said. "We believe we can scale up for full-scale production in one year," said Swift CEO Dave Perme, who also said, "Research shows that we can get to a competitive price compared to 100LL."

A recent survey lists 216 ethanol production facilities in the United States. Projected ethanol demands have not approached the production mandates passed by Congress. As a consequence, plant construction has slowed, some plants are mothballed, and a few are being sold at auction.

It appears that GAMI and Swift are the only two players in the new avgas game. But underneath all the formulations, standards, testing and approvals required to get to the new avgas is a plan to introduce another leaded avgas: an ultralow-lead 100 octane fuel.

94UL and Auto Gas
In 2009 TCM flight-tested 94UL — which approximates today's 100LL without the lead — in a Hawker Beechcraft G36 with a 300 horsepower, fuel-injected IO-55B engine and in a Cirrus SR22T 315 horsepower, turbocharged, fuel-injected TSIO-550 engine. Flying's Robert Goyer flew the SR22 with 94UL and was impressed by the power and performance of the low-compression engine on the unleaded version of our current avgas.

Johnny Doo, TCM's vice president of engineering, agrees that the higher-horsepower turbocharged engine — with 7.5:1 compression — ran fine on 94UL fuel. Unfortunately, the 300 horsepower normally aspirated engine, with 8.5:1 compression cylinders, "was not happy," Doo said.

The telling difference between the two engines is the compression ratio.

Doo said TCM tested the fuel to determine how well the company's high-powered engines performed on 94UL.

"94UL has an existing ASTM spec, so we wanted to see where we stood if it was the final fuel," Doo said. He said that installing lower-compression pistons or "smart" ignition systems, or limiting takeoff power, would be required to provide the required detonation protection for TCM's 8.5:1 compression ratio engines if 94UL is adopted as the new avgas.

According to TCM, the piston change to lower the compression ratio from 8.5:1 to 7.5:1 would reduce the engine's maximum power by 3 or 4 percent. This swap would reduce a 300 horsepower engine's maximum power output to between 288 and 291 horsepower.

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Lars Hjelmberg's picture

Flying seems in this article to forget that one country in the world already has made the transition to unleaded AVGAS and that happened 30 years ago. Flying also seems to forget that
there is an unleaded AVGAS now in production for 20 years that has engine manufacturers approval covering > 90 % of the entire world piston aircraft fleet.
Of course this fuel also has full approvals from the European FAA, The EASA.
http://ad.easa.europa.eu/ad/2010-31
This fuel also has flown for millions of flight hours in thousands and thousands of aircraft
in all possible weather conditions during these decades.

If a Flying reader wants to know more about unleaded AVGAS visit
www.hjelmco.com
Things also happen outside the US -- Wellcome to Sweden where you will find unleaded
AVGAS at almost every GA-airport.

Lars Hjelmberg/Hjelmco (the inventor of the Hjelmco unleaded AVGAS 91/96 UL

N32Romeo's picture

Gone are the days that a large percentage of GA airports sold Auto Gas. I once flew my C-182 from CA to Oshkosh and back on auto gas. Now you cannot even find auto gas available in CA without Ethanol. Uncontaminated auto gas has been regulated out of existence here. I own two aircraft that now have worthless Auto Fuel STCs, due to stupid politicians (the same folks that have bankrupt California). My only alternative is to use 100LL, or move out of California.

Thomas Boyle's picture

Has anyone heard of the Aviation Fuel Club? It's apparently an initiative to make Premium E0 (zero ethanol) fuel available to pilots, boaters, motorcyclists, vintage car owners and others who need a zero-ethanol fuel for their sporting purposes. It's promoted by U-Fuel, which produces self-serve automated fuel stations. Dan Johnson wrote about it in his blog (http://www.bydanjohnson.com/index.cfm) on Feb 22. It would be nice to see a market solution emerge, after all this top-down "one (100 octane) fuel or bust, price no object" central planning from the letter-groups.

pyro_joe's picture

Lars, forget that 91 octane crap. Start sending your 115/145 over here, and I will personally buy at least 110 gallons per month.

N666UF's picture

"EPA suggested that around 50 percent of the airborne lead in the United States can be linked to 100LL avgas. "

The EPA website says that airborne lead has dropped 93% since 1980 and that current levels are WELL BELOW the National Standard. Obviously what little 100LL does contribute today is no more than equal the background noise. Reasonable people would say 100LL has no effect at all on pilots or the general populous.

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