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On Thu, 13 Dec 2007 04:00:58 GMT, "Cy Galley"
wrote: No extra heat in high Octane. Same hydrocarbon structure is both. Same BTUs. Only difference is the speed of combustion is controlled so it is slower in the higher octane to prevent pre-ignition. WAY off base, Cy. On ALL counts, except the no extra heat and same BTU's. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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On Dec 12, 9:08 pm, clare at snyder.on.ca wrote:
On Thu, 13 Dec 2007 04:00:58 GMT, "Cy Galley" wrote: No extra heat in high Octane. Same hydrocarbon structure is both. Same BTUs. Only difference is the speed of combustion is controlled so it is slower in the higher octane to prevent pre-ignition. WAY off base, Cy. On ALL counts, except the no extra heat and same BTU's. -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com Higher-octane rated fuels have about the same flame front speed as lower-octane fuels, at around 100 feet per second. It's their resistance to detonation, which involves flame fronts speeds of 5000 feet per second or more, that makes them necessary in high-compression engines. As the combustion process begins in the cylinder, the burning raises the pressure through the entire air/fuel mix, and low-octane rated fuels will break down under that increasing pressure and spontaneously combine with the oxygen, igniting almost all at once instead of *waiting* (key word) for the flame to set them off in a controlled chain reaction. Detonation therefore requires time to develop. Low RPM with high MP is pro-detonation. Lean mixtures burn more slowly, so they're pro-detonation. Big cylinders take more time for the flame front to cross, so they suffer more from detonation. Preignition is something else. It's ignition of the mix during compression by some hot spot in the cylinder, perhaps a glowing bit of carbon in the head or on the piston. The burn begins early, before the sparkplug was scheduled to fire, and gets way ahead of itself due to the still-increasing compression as well as the combustion, and detonation might happen. The damage is about the same. Engines that aren't leaned properly will develop more carbon to cause preignition. Too much lead fouling can do it. An oil-burner will carbon up, too. Octane ratings are different than octane content. In the old way, fuel under test was fed to a variable-compression test engine and the compression was raised until detonation began to occur. Then that fuel was shut off and a mix of octane and heptane was introduced, engine still running, and the octane/heptane ratio was varied until the detonation point was established. An 80-octane fuel had the same detonation characteristics as a mix of 80% octane and 20% heptane, hence the rating. 80/87 reflected the detonation resistance at lean and rich settings. Fuels with ratings above 100 obviously have to be rated using some other method, since we can't have a fuel consisting of, say, 115% octane. Dan |
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On Thu, 13 Dec 2007 04:00:58 GMT, "Cy Galley"
wrote: No extra heat in high Octane. Same hydrocarbon structure is both. Same BTUs. Only difference is the speed of combustion is controlled so it is slower in the higher octane to prevent pre-ignition. Cy I'm on your side. See my prior post. Lot of people are using different words to describe the same thing which may be part of the problem. Big John |
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On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 09:23:52 -0800, Richard Riley
wrote: If you're flying a homebuilt you can burn whatever you want - but the alcohol restriction wasn't put there at random, it increases vapor lock problems dramatically, How do the planes which do fly on ethanol handle that problem, pressurized tanks? and is incompatable with many of the materials commonly used in aircraft fuel systems. The sealant sloshed in the tanks is one, I think ... Do automobiles with flex-fuel capability do anything to minimize the vapor lock issues? I'm sure the materials were selected to be ok. |
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On Dec 10, 11:06 am, GeorgeB wrote:
On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 09:23:52 -0800, Richard Riley wrote: If you're flying a homebuilt you can burn whatever you want - but the alcohol restriction wasn't put there at random, it increases vapor lock problems dramatically, How do the planes which do fly on ethanol handle that problem, pressurized tanks? and is incompatable with many of the materials commonly used in aircraft fuel systems. The sealant sloshed in the tanks is one, I think ... Do automobiles with flex-fuel capability do anything to minimize the vapor lock issues? I'm sure the materials were selected to be ok. Most autos use electric in-tank fuel pumps now. When the fuel is pushed to the engine there's little vapor-lock risk. Aircraft still often use pumps on the engines that pull the fuel, so that the pressure on the fuel in the lines drops and the vapor pressure of the fuel will cause vapor lock under the right conditions. Low-wing airplanes that have the tanks in the wings will have boost pumps somewhere low in the system, but when they're turned off after takeoff the risk of vapor lock rises with autofuels. Remember the old high-school science demonstration of water boiling at room temperature when a bell jar is placed over a bowl of it and the air sucked out of the jar? The lowered atmospheric pressure lowers the boiling point of the water. Gasoline has a higher vapor pressure than water, so lowering the pressure on it will make it give off vapors quickly, and those vapors displace the fuel in the lines and prevent the fuel flow. The pump will be quite happy to pump vapors, but carburetors and fuel injectors don't deal with vapors very well, and the engine gets hungry and goes on strike. A pump that sucks the fuel to lift it from the tank lowers the fuel pressure between the tank and pump. A pump that pushes it upward from the tank avoids that. Dan |
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"GeorgeB" wrote in message
... On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 09:23:52 -0800, Richard Riley wrote: If you're flying a homebuilt you can burn whatever you want - but the alcohol restriction wasn't put there at random, it increases vapor lock problems dramatically, How do the planes which do fly on ethanol handle that problem, pressurized tanks? The vapor pressure of ethanol alone (or gasoline alone) is less than a gasoline ethanol mix. The maximum vapor pressure comes from about 10% to 20% ethanol and 80% to 90% gasoline. I don't recall why - just what is. and is incompatable with many of the materials commonly used in aircraft fuel systems. The sealant sloshed in the tanks is one, I think ... Do automobiles with flex-fuel capability do anything to minimize the vapor lock issues? I'm sure the materials were selected to be ok. They can run higher fuel pressures and/or increase the injector pulsewidth as a function of measured or inferred fuel rail temperature. Another helpful option is to have a system that returns excess fuel back to the tank which tends to purge out any vapor bubbles. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
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"Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk at wow way d0t com wrote in message
news:KP6dnV86MLVlRcDanZ2dnUVZ_vmlnZ2d@wideopenwest .com... "GeorgeB" wrote in message ... On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 09:23:52 -0800, Richard Riley wrote: If you're flying a homebuilt you can burn whatever you want - but the alcohol restriction wasn't put there at random, it increases vapor lock problems dramatically, How do the planes which do fly on ethanol handle that problem, pressurized tanks? The vapor pressure of ethanol alone (or gasoline alone) is less than a gasoline ethanol mix. The maximum vapor pressure comes from about 10% to 20% ethanol and 80% to 90% gasoline. I don't recall why - just what is. and is incompatable with many of the materials commonly used in aircraft fuel systems. The sealant sloshed in the tanks is one, I think ... Do automobiles with flex-fuel capability do anything to minimize the vapor lock issues? I'm sure the materials were selected to be ok. They can run higher fuel pressures and/or increase the injector pulsewidth as a function of measured or inferred fuel rail temperature. Another helpful option is to have a system that returns excess fuel back to the tank which tends to purge out any vapor bubbles. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. I'm not sure, and also not qualified; but enough others are weighing in... So, IIRC, the real issue with the STC is whether the fuel in question can be reasonably asserted to conform to the same ASTM specification as the fuel which was used for the test program for certification of the STC. In the case of automobiles, the decision was made by governmental edict to simply treat E10 the same as "pure" gasoline for automotive purposes. However, that was not made applicable to certified aircraft engines; so all of the testing would need to be done again to obtain a new STC. Speaking only for myself, I would be reluctant to invest much effort or funding in such a venture because the formulation of the fuel could be a moving target--for example, next year mogas could magically become E15. As to whether any, or all, of the other concerns are valid, I really don't know. But, I do recall reading that the original specification regarding vapor presure, which was indeed written to minimize vapor lock, may have been written in error--shortly after WWI! So, everyone else's guess is probably at least as good as mine. Peter Just my $0.02 |
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![]() As far as cars are concerned, for quite some time now, most vehicles have had returnless systems where the pressure regulator and pump are in the tank. The reason that fuel is not returned to the tank is that the fuel, having made the trip to the fuel rail and back, has picked up heat. This heat is released in the fuel tank, heating the fuel and increasing the fuel tank pressure. This wrecks havoc with the evaporative emission systems ability to detect leaks smaller than the current spec of 0.020". Now with an aircraft, this shouldn't be a problem as there are now emission systems on them...yet. Dale Alexander They can run higher fuel pressures and/or increase the injector pulsewidth as a function of measured or inferred fuel rail temperature. Another helpful option is to have a system that returns excess fuel back to the tank which tends to purge out any vapor bubbles. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
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On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 19:25:31 -0500, "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea
Hawk at wow way d0t com wrote: "GeorgeB" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 09:23:52 -0800, Richard Riley wrote: If you're flying a homebuilt you can burn whatever you want - but the alcohol restriction wasn't put there at random, it increases vapor lock problems dramatically, How do the planes which do fly on ethanol handle that problem, pressurized tanks? The vapor pressure of ethanol alone (or gasoline alone) is less than a gasoline ethanol mix. The maximum vapor pressure comes from about 10% to 20% ethanol and 80% to 90% gasoline. I don't recall why - just what is. and is incompatable with many of the materials commonly used in aircraft fuel systems. The sealant sloshed in the tanks is one, I think ... Do automobiles with flex-fuel capability do anything to minimize the vapor lock issues? I'm sure the materials were selected to be ok. They can run higher fuel pressures and/or increase the injector pulsewidth as a function of measured or inferred fuel rail temperature. Another helpful option is to have a system that returns excess fuel back to the tank which tends to purge out any vapor bubbles. Not only purges bubbles but also cools the lines. The pump moves multiple quantities of fuel compared to what the engine actually consumes (on some vehicles as much as TEN TIMES.- but most closer to 3) -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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