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pchristensen10(at)austin.
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 6:40 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

What I have found in washing the alcohol from my gasoline is that a small amount of settling occurs in the tank while the plane is sitting. I drain my gascolator before and after each flight. The gascolator bowl has started to rust and I plan to clean it up and coat the bowl with Kreem. I discontinued using washed gas over the winter since my plane sat more. I may try washing my gas twice to see if this stops the settlement.

Pete


On 2/7/2011 8:23 PM, Noel Loveys wrote: [quote] <![endif]--> <![endif]-->
If you really, really have to fly on ethanol fuel then you have already broken the first cardinal rule. Never leave fuel in your plane for an extended period of time. If you have high humidity, as you said, it will absorb some of the moisture and when that happens it, not only gets closer to a phase separation but becomes very corrosive.... It may eat your tanks if they are anything but stainless steel. It will probably start to eat your fuel system including the carb body and the fuel lines. Best not to leave it in the plane and only fly on fresh fuel. BTW you will know when you have a phase separation happening... you will get something just over 10% of the quantity of fuel in your tank showing up as water. So if you have left say 15 gal of fuel in your plane then if it separates you will get 1.5 gallons of water/ethanol solution (mostly water) hitting your carb or injectors. A little good news is if you are using a paper filter it will try to block the water from passing... unfortunately there won’t be anything else but water to pass. The milky substance you did find is probably something the ethanol started to eat.

The second point is as Barry mentioned remove the ethanol form your fuel by adding enough water to cause a phase separation. Then siphon the clear ethanol free gas off the top of the water ethanol solution that will form on the bottom of the container. Be careful though, to let the gas sit for about twenty minutes so all the water can settle out before siphoning the gas. And always use a good chamois or felt to strain your gas... either of those products will pass gas but not water. If you remove the ethanol from your fuel then it won’t hurt to leave the gas in your plane between flights for periods of up to I guess a month or so.

Noel



From: owner-rotaxengines-list-server(at)matronics.com (owner-rotaxengines-list-server(at)matronics.com) [mailto:owner-rotaxengines-list-server(at)matronics.com (owner-rotaxengines-list-server(at)matronics.com)] On Behalf Of FLYaDIVE
Sent: February 7, 2011 2:29 PM
To: rotaxengines-list(at)matronics.com (rotaxengines-list(at)matronics.com)
Subject: Re: ethanol


Joe:


There are a few things that would cause your fuel to go cloudy:

Contamination in the tank.

Hygroscopic action of the alcohol

Temperature (low) causing the water to freeze



Being that you found only 1/2 ounce I would also consider:

The drain plugs as being contaminated due to oxidation

How clean was the inspection tube that you were using



When you say 'separation', are you referring to the water separating out from the fuel due to saturation? If yes, then YES you could be seeing the water above what the alcohol would hold in suspension.



A 1/2 ounce... I would not worry about. But why use gas with ethanol - Do the separation procedure that has been discussed here on line and you will reduce the chances of water.



Barry
On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 10:10 AM, Joe and Joan Kimbell <jnjkimbell(at)hotmail.com (jnjkimbell(at)hotmail.com)> wrote:
Appreciate some info concerning fuel seperation. I have CH701 with the 100hp riotax. I live in a high humedity area and have not been flying much lately. I use 10% ethanol fuel and last time I started to fly (fuel had been in A/C over a month) and checked the lowest drain, I found cloudy fuel, not water, but did not lood good. I continued to drain fuel until it was clear, probably a half an ounce. Was this cloudy fuel on the point of seperation? I did go ahead and fly with no problems, but after thinking about it, what would the list's ideas be. Very glad it kept running, though an both tanks the fuel seemed to come out of only one tank. No external fuel pump. Gravity feed.

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raybot(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 7:33 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

How in the world do millions of cars run trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??
[quote] ---


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williamtsullivan(at)att.n
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 7:42 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

  Their tanks are sealed, and they purchase fresh gas all the time.

--- On Wed, 5/25/11, ray atkinson <raybot(at)comcast.net> wrote:
From: ray atkinson <raybot(at)comcast.net>
Subject: Re: ethanol
To: rotaxengines-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Wednesday, May 25, 2011, 11:31 AM

How in the world do millions of cars run trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??

---


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rickyd54(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 8:27 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

Because they don't have fiberglass fuel tanks!
Leave a half tank of gasohol in your car for 2 months and then see how well it runs.
Rick

On May 25, 2011, at 10:31 AM, "ray atkinson" <raybot(at)comcast.net (raybot(at)comcast.net)> wrote:

[quote] How in the world do millions of cars run trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??
[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 8:28 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

Who said they were "trouble free"?

On May 25, 2011, at 10:31 AM, "ray atkinson" <raybot(at)comcast.net (raybot(at)comcast.net)> wrote:

[quote] How in the world do millions of cars run trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??
[quote] ---


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pchristensen10(at)austin.
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 9:36 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

I know for sure my car mileage went down when they started pumping gasohol.

Pete


On 5/25/2011 11:25 AM, Rick Thomason wrote: [quote] Who said they were "trouble free"?

On May 25, 2011, at 10:31 AM, "ray atkinson" <raybot(at)comcast.net (raybot(at)comcast.net)> wrote:


[quote] How in the world do millions of cars run trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??
[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 9:43 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

I,ve burned year old gas and gas oil mix from my friends plane that was old and never missed a beat.I know its not not great as fuel gut it works pretty good really. Phase separation with a gallon and a half of water? In my situation its impractical to wash gas.I am not allowed to store gas in my hanger much less siphon it and transfer it and all this other stuff that will eventually lead to a spill minor or otherwise.Plane owners in adjoining hanger don,t like the smell of gas fumes and my contract specifically forbids this.If you do it somewhere else and then transport?
[quote] ---


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pwmac(at)sisna.com
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 11:06 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

BS
I leave two cars for 6 months each year unused
full of gas and have never seen any negative things. The cars work just fine.
True - Cars and planes are like apples and
oranges. Cars are designed for toxic and
corrosive fuel and your homebuilt or certified planes are not.
Paul
======
At 10:24 AM 5/25/2011, Rick Thomason wrote:
[quote]Because they don't have fiberglass fuel tanks!

Leave a half tank of gasohol in your car for 2
months and then see how well it runs.

Rick

On May 25, 2011, at 10:31 AM, "ray atkinson"
<<mailto:raybot(at)comcast.net>raybot(at)comcast.net> wrote:

>How in the world do millions of cars run
>trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??
>---


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Roger Lee



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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 11:12 am    Post subject: Re: ethanol Reply with quote

If you use washed 91 oct it will be 87 when your done. If you have a 912ULS (100 hp) that won't work. If you start with 87 oct it isn't fit for either 912. You will eventually end up replacing the carb bowls at $100 a piece because the very small amount of moisture still in the fuel will pit the aluminum bowl. I have had to replace a few of these already for the long term hard core washers.

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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 3:03 pm    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

According to Portablefuelsystems.com before washing 91.3 octane after washing 88.7.

Pete


On 5/25/2011 5:28 PM, FLYaDIVE wrote: [quote]Hi Roger:

How did you get the octane rating of 87 after washing 91?


Alcohol does add a small amount of octane but I really doubt if it is 4 points.


Do you know anyone that can run octane tests?


I have a couple of tests I want to get done.


As for the pitting of the fuel bowl... That is an easy cure. Send it out and get it Hard Coat Anodized to a thickness of 0.0025". It should cost about $20 to $50 tops. When talking to the plating house you - should - know what kind of aluminum it is made from. OR at least if it is cast or machined from a billet. Also be nice to the house and ask if they could just run it with a bigger batch - NO SPECIAL HANDLING REQUIRED. This keeps price down.


Barry
On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 3:12 PM, Roger Lee <ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com (ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com)> wrote:
Quote:
--> RotaxEngines-List message posted by: "Roger Lee" <ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com (ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com)>

If you use washed 91 oct it will be 87 when your done. If you have a 912ULS (100 hp) that won't work. If you start with 87 oct it isn't fit for either 912. You will eventually end up replacing the carb bowls at $100 a piece because the very small amount of moisture still in the fuel will pit the aluminum bowl. I have had to replace a few of these already for the long term hard core washers.

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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 3:44 pm    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

I said "half a tank" so the ethanol can suck all the water out of the air. I just switched over to 100LL. Better to spew lead into the air than kill myself over a water droplet or dissolved fiberglass.

On May 25, 2011, at 1:56 PM, paul wilson <pwmac(at)sisna.com> wrote:

[quote]

BS
I leave two cars for 6 months each year unused full of gas and have never seen any negative things. The cars work just fine.
True - Cars and planes are like apples and oranges. Cars are designed for toxic and corrosive fuel and your homebuilt or certified planes are not.
Paul
======
At 10:24 AM 5/25/2011, Rick Thomason wrote:
> Because they don't have fiberglass fuel tanks!
>
> Leave a half tank of gasohol in your car for 2 months and then see how well it runs.
>
> Rick
>
> On May 25, 2011, at 10:31 AM, "ray atkinson" <<mailto:raybot(at)comcast.net>raybot(at)comcast.net> wrote:
>
>> How in the world do millions of cars run trillions of miles trouble free on this stuff??
>> ---


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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 3:47 pm    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

I find it odd that some airports have this policy since most plane owners "store" over 25 gallons of fuel in the tanks of the plane. What's the difference?

On May 25, 2011, at 12:41 PM, "ray atkinson" <raybot(at)comcast.net (raybot(at)comcast.net)> wrote:

[quote] I,ve burned year old gas and gas oil mix from my friends plane that was old and never missed a beat.I know its not not great as fuel gut it works pretty good really. Phase separation with a gallon and a half of water? In my situation its impractical to wash gas.I am not allowed to store gas in my hanger much less siphon it and transfer it and all this other stuff that will eventually lead to a spill minor or otherwise.Plane owners in adjoining hanger don,t like the smell of gas fumes and my contract specifically forbids this.If you do it somewhere else and then transport?
[quote] ---


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Joined: 10 Jan 2006
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 4:39 pm    Post subject: Re: ethanol Reply with quote

I have seen two test reports from the companies that make these fuel washing systems. They both showed me reports starting with 91 and came out with 87. No matter what the octane (88.7 or 87) it's too low for the 912ULS and it still causes corrosion in either engine. The ethanol is not an issue at all for the Rotax 912 series engine. You just need to make sure you use the proper fuel hoses and know what your fuel tank is made out of. I have seen several people take their tanks and slosh them with Kreem Weiss and just use the ethanol since it is impervious to the ethanol. The entire fleet of Flight Design aircraft uses the Kreem Weiss and a huge majority use ethanol laced fuel without any issue and has been for years. The fuel storage issue in hangars is a fire code issue and airports don't normally buck that system as it would leave them liable.

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dave



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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 5:00 pm    Post subject: Re: ethanol-- on You tube Reply with quote

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReguEsLfKcI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ikyc0xOAjbw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AnQLfJrFc_c

some fun with ethanol and water after testing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJZOY8z_9Tk


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BARRY CHECK 6



Joined: 15 Mar 2011
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 6:11 pm    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 9:00 PM, dave <dave(at)cfisher.com (dave(at)cfisher.com)> wrote:
Quote:
--> RotaxEngines-List message posted by: "dave" <dave(at)cfisher.com (dave(at)cfisher.com)>

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReguEsLfKcI
 
This guy runs a test like a drunk sailor runs from the SP.
 
[quote]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ikyc0xOAjbw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AnQLfJrFc_c

some fun with ethanol and water after testing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJZOY8z_9Tk

--------
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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 7:41 pm    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

It isn't the storage of fuel that's the problem, it's the transfer from jerry cans to airplane. I published this story in our EAA chapter's newsletter a couple of years ago.

I had a rather exciting experience that occurred while refueling my RV-6A. I have a Mazda 13B as a power plant using auto fuel. Not having auto fuel at the airport, I have been transporting it in a 5 gallon plastic container (approved for auto fuel) and using a funnel to pour the gasoline into the wing tank.
Sensitive to the risks of static electricity, I always grounded (I know - I question whether you can truly "ground" a plastic container) the plastic container against the airframe prior to pouring in the gasoline. I have refuel the aircraft many times before using this method (as well numerous lawn mowers, weed wackers, etc). I had hauled the aircraft out of the hangar and had it sitting in the middle of the tarmac in front of the hanger and had commenced to refuel.
Well, this time it happened. As I was approximately half-way through pouring from the five gallon container into the funnel (the plastic funnel is a very wide mouth with a filter cartridge in its center- used to quickly fill race cars) the fireworks started. The gasoline ignited with a "Swoosh" and I found myself holding a flaming funnel as well as the five gallon container which had flames coming from its opening.
Needless to say, things got very exciting and busy in a hurry. As I reacted to the flames going off, I swung the container away, which was in my right hand, removed the flaming funnel from the wing tank opening with my left hand. In the process, I sloshed some flaming gasoline onto the wing and tarmac. And flames were now also coming from the opening of the wing tank. So by quick count, I had flames coming out of the wing tank, some burning on the wing, a patch burning on the tarmac, a flaming funnel as well as the 5 gallon container on fire. Did I say things got exciting in a hurry?
I immediately move the flaming container about 12-15 feet away from the aircraft and set it down, quickly moved the flaming funnel about 5 feet from the container and laid it down.. Immediately dashed to the plane and placed the fuel cap into the tank opening stuffing out that fire, smothered the fire on the wing, ran back to the container and placed its lid on the flaming opening smothering that fire, moved the still flaming funnel further away, smothered the fire on the tarmac and then returned to smother the funnel.
Finally, all fires are extinguished and I take time for a breath. Wasn't timing myself as I was somewhat distracted at the moment, but believe the entire event from ignition to all flames out was around 30-45 seconds (could be wrong about the time, but not by much). Old men can move quickly if motivated properly.
Yes, I did have a fire extinguisher, but had neglected to take it out of the car and when I ran to the car and reached under the drivers seat—IT was NOT there (Later found it under the passengers seat). I also have a small Halon fire extinguisher mounted between the seats of aircraft - but, again distance and flames were between it and me.
Won't make that mistake again. Also, I will never use a plastic container again, but will use a metal one with a little cable attached that I can ground to the aircraft. I will also not use a plastic funnel, but will probably use one of the rotary pumps with hose and nozzle grounded.
So, the good news is no damage to me or the aircraft and a much wiser me. While it had not ever happened before, I quickly found out that one time is one time too many.
Rick Girard

On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 6:43 PM, Rick Thomason <rickyd54(at)gmail.com (rickyd54(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
[quote] I find it odd that some airports have this policy since most plane owners "store" over 25 gallons of fuel in the tanks of the plane. What's the difference? 

On May 25, 2011, at 12:41 PM, "ray atkinson" <raybot(at)comcast.net (raybot(at)comcast.net)> wrote:

[quote] I,ve burned year old gas and gas oil mix from my friends plane that was old and never missed a beat.I know its not not great as fuel gut it works pretty good really. Phase separation with a gallon and a half of water? In my situation its impractical to wash gas.I am not allowed to store gas in my hanger much less siphon it and transfer it and all this other stuff that will eventually lead to a spill minor or otherwise.Plane owners in adjoining hanger don,t like the smell of gas fumes and my contract specifically forbids this.If you do it somewhere else and then transport? 
[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 2:51 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

I put the marine version of Stabil in all my gas, even if I fly that day. It has an ethanol treatment in it.




From: Richard Girard (aslsa.rng(at)gmail.com)
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2011 11:39 PM
To: rotaxengines-list(at)matronics.com (rotaxengines-list(at)matronics.com)
Subject: Re: ethanol


It isn't the storage of fuel that's the problem, it's the transfer from jerry cans to airplane. I published this story in our EAA chapter's newsletter a couple of years ago.
I had a rather exciting experience that occurred while refueling my RV-6A. I have a Mazda 13B as a power plant using auto fuel. Not having auto fuel at the airport, I have been transporting it in a 5 gallon plastic container (approved for auto fuel) and using a funnel to pour the gasoline into the wing tank.
Sensitive to the risks of static electricity, I always grounded (I know - I question whether you can truly "ground" a plastic container) the plastic container against the airframe prior to pouring in the gasoline. I have refuel the aircraft many times before using this method (as well numerous lawn mowers, weed wackers, etc). I had hauled the aircraft out of the hangar and had it sitting in the middle of the tarmac in front of the hanger and had commenced to refuel.
Well, this time it happened. As I was approximately half-way through pouring from the five gallon container into the funnel (the plastic funnel is a very wide mouth with a filter cartridge in its center- used to quickly fill race cars) the fireworks started. The gasoline ignited with a "Swoosh" and I found myself holding a flaming funnel as well as the five gallon container which had flames coming from its opening.
Needless to say, things got very exciting and busy in a hurry. As I reacted to the flames going off, I swung the container away, which was in my right hand, removed the flaming funnel from the wing tank opening with my left hand. In the process, I sloshed some flaming gasoline onto the wing and tarmac. And flames were now also coming from the opening of the wing tank. So by quick count, I had flames coming out of the wing tank, some burning on the wing, a patch burning on the tarmac, a flaming funnel as well as the 5 gallon container on fire. Did I say things got exciting in a hurry?
I immediately move the flaming container about 12-15 feet away from the aircraft and set it down, quickly moved the flaming funnel about 5 feet from the container and laid it down.. Immediately dashed to the plane and placed the fuel cap into the tank opening stuffing out that fire, smothered the fire on the wing, ran back to the container and placed its lid on the flaming opening smothering that fire, moved the still flaming funnel further away, smothered the fire on the tarmac and then returned to smother the funnel.
Finally, all fires are extinguished and I take time for a breath. Wasn't timing myself as I was somewhat distracted at the moment, but believe the entire event from ignition to all flames out was around 30-45 seconds (could be wrong about the time, but not by much). Old men can move quickly if motivated properly.
Yes, I did have a fire extinguisher, but had neglected to take it out of the car and when I ran to the car and reached under the drivers seat—IT was NOT there (Later found it under the passengers seat). I also have a small Halon fire extinguisher mounted between the seats of aircraft - but, again distance and flames were between it and me.
Won't make that mistake again. Also, I will never use a plastic container again, but will use a metal one with a little cable attached that I can ground to the aircraft. I will also not use a plastic funnel, but will probably use one of the rotary pumps with hose and nozzle grounded.
So, the good news is no damage to me or the aircraft and a much wiser me. While it had not ever happened before, I quickly found out that one time is one time too many.

Rick Girard

On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 6:43 PM, Rick Thomason <rickyd54(at)gmail.com (rickyd54(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
[quote] I find it odd that some airports have this policy since most plane owners "store" over 25 gallons of fuel in the tanks of the plane. What's the difference?

On May 25, 2011, at 12:41 PM, "ray atkinson" <raybot(at)comcast.net (raybot(at)comcast.net)> wrote:

[quote] I,ve burned year old gas and gas oil mix from my friends plane that was old and never missed a beat.I know its not not great as fuel gut it works pretty good really. Phase separation with a gallon and a half of water? In my situation its impractical to wash gas.I am not allowed to store gas in my hanger much less siphon it and transfer it and all this other stuff that will eventually lead to a spill minor or otherwise.Plane owners in adjoining hanger don,t like the smell of gas fumes and my contract specifically forbids this.If you do it somewhere else and then transport?
[quote] ---


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Thom Riddle



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1597
Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 5:15 am    Post subject: Re: ethanol Reply with quote

Rick,

Thanks for your fire story. Glad that you had a very cheap learning experience. Could have been disastrous.

That is the first actual case of fire from static discharge I've heard of using plastic cans for filling an aircraft tank. I use a 15 gallon storage tank and hand pump but have been neglecting grounding it to the airframe due to sheer laziness. I will be grounding from now on, without fail.


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pchristensen10(at)austin.
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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 7:58 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

http://portablefuelsystems.com/AlcoholSeparator.htm

On 5/25/2011 9:18 PM, FLYaDIVE wrote: [quote] Hello Pete:

I went to the web site, could not find anythng about washing the gas or octain ratings.

Could you send the exact link that will get me to where you read the information.

Barry


On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 7:00 PM, Pete Christensen <pchristensen10(at)austin.rr.com (pchristensen10(at)austin.rr.com)> wrote:
Quote:
According to Portablefuelsystems.com before washing 91.3 octane after washing 88.7.

Pete


On 5/25/2011 5:28 PM, FLYaDIVE wrote:
Quote:
Hi Roger:

How did you get the octane rating of 87 after washing 91?


Alcohol does add a small amount of octane but I really doubt if it is 4 points.


Do you know anyone that can run octane tests?


I have a couple of tests I want to get done.


As for the pitting of the fuel bowl... That is an easy cure. Send it out and get it Hard Coat Anodized to a thickness of 0.0025". It should cost about $20 to $50 tops. When talking to the plating house you - should - know what kind of aluminum it is made from. OR at least if it is cast or machined from a billet. Also be nice to the house and ask if they could just run it with a bigger batch - NO SPECIAL HANDLING REQUIRED. This keeps price down.


Barry

On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 3:12 PM, Roger Lee <ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com (ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com)> wrote:

Quote:
--> RotaxEngines-List message posted by: "Roger Lee" <ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com (ssadiver1(at)yahoo.com)>

If you use washed 91 oct it will be 87 when your done. If you have a 912ULS (100 hp) that won't work. If you start with 87 oct it isn't fit for either 912. You will eventually end up replacing the carb bowls at $100 a piece because the very small amount of moisture still in the fuel will pit the aluminum bowl. I have had to replace a few of these already for the long term hard core washers.

--------
Roger Lee
Tucson, Az.
Light Sport Repairman - Maintenance Rated
Rotax Repair Center
Home [url=tel:520-574-1080]520-574-1080[/url] TRY HOME FIRST
Cell [url=tel:520-349-7056]520-349-7056[/url]




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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 8:06 am    Post subject: ethanol Reply with quote

Roger,

I have an older 912 from 1991 so I do not need more than 87 octane.
Here in the Austin area the pumps say 93 octane. I'm interested in the
bowl pitting. Does the corrosion eat through the bowls? I'm on pure
avgas not but thought I would start testing a 2 phase washing process in
the near future. I guess a guy could slosh the bowls with Kreem to
prevent pitting.

Pete
Leander, Tx
Kitfox III 912

On 5/25/2011 7:39 PM, Roger Lee wrote:
Quote:


I have seen two test reports from the companies that make these fuel washing systems. They both showed me reports starting with 91 and came out with 87. No matter what the octane (88.7 or 87) it's too low for the 912ULS and it still causes corrosion in either engine. The ethanol is not an issue at all for the Rotax 912 series engine. You just need to make sure you use the proper fuel hoses and know what your fuel tank is made out of. I have seen several people take their tanks and slosh them with Kreem Weiss and just use the ethanol since it is impervious to the ethanol. The fuel storage issue in hangars is a fire code issue and airports don't normally buck that system as it would leave them liable.

--------
Roger Lee
Tucson, Az.
Light Sport Repairman - Maintenance Rated
Rotax Repair Center
Home 520-574-1080 TRY HOME FIRST
Cell 520-349-7056


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