Jump to content

Based on the G100UL fuel leak thread what's your position?


G100UL Poll   

122 members have voted

  1. 1. Based on the G100UL fuel leak thread what's your position?

    • I am currently using G100UL with no problems
      2
    • I have used G100UL and I had leaks/paint stain
      2
    • G100UL is not available in my airport/county/state
      100
    • I am not going to use G100UL because of the thread
      25


Recommended Posts

Posted
7 hours ago, MikeOH said:

In a word, "yes", people are going to die before the FAA rescinds their blanket STC.  As you point out, that's what it has taken in the past; this situation is no different.  Maybe even worse since the politics of "lead is EVIL" is likely more problematic than biz jets for the rich.

Maybe the powers to be are taking the position that few folks crashing their little annoying airplanes does not matter because we are saving the entire planet from slow and painful death caused by lead emissions from 100LL.

Sarcasm off...

On a more serious note, what would be the result of o-ring failure in the Cessna fuel selector that Mike had shown in his video? I am not familiar with that design. would it cause massive leak and possibly fuel starvation or fire? 

Posted
1 hour ago, IvanP said:

On a more serious note, what would be the result of o-ring failure in the Cessna fuel selector that Mike had shown in his video? I am not familiar with that design. would it cause massive leak and possibly fuel starvation or fire? 

There are a number of failure modes evident in the video.   As originally reported, the control handle can be jammed by the o-ring fragments which could prevent selection of a tank or crossfeed, and also prevent being able to shut the fuel off to an engine fire.   The o-ring fragments were shown to be able to flow out from the selector to the engine, which can certainly cause issues.   Also, since the o-ring disintegration or displacement from their grooves essentially removes them from the system, there could be some uncontrolled flow between all of the ports on the selector, in other words, you lose complete control over the fuel flow.    It should not cause an external leak unless the main o-ring to the control shaft failed, which didn't fail in the examples, presumably because it is always in a constrained configuration, unlike the smaller o-rings in the system.

It's a dangerous situation, IMHO.  It's also not an isolated case, as nitrile/buna-N/etc. rings are still widely used in general aviation.

  • Like 2
Posted

At this time stamp (28:54) truth of the matter is stated. No fuel is perfect, we can all agree certainly not 100LL. But he seems to admit here also not G100UL. They got it to work for the engine so they think for the rest of the problems caused by its bad side need to be fixed by finding solutions on the other side of the equation. In other words, G100UL is fine for for your engine, maybe even better, as for the interactions with other materials we don't care, just find better ones, you're on your own. And if you can't or if that costs you a lot of money, well.. that's just your bad luck.

I guess it's an approach.

 

  • Like 2
Posted
3 hours ago, hazek said:

At this time stamp (28:54) truth of the matter is stated. No fuel is perfect, we can all agree certainly not 100LL. But he seems to admit here also not G100UL. They got it to work for the engine so they think for the rest of the problems caused by it's bad side need to be fixed by finding solutions on the other side of the equation. In other words, G100UL is fine for for your engine, maybe even better, as for the interactions with other materials we don't care, just find better ones, you're on your own. And if you can't or if that costs you a lot of money, well.. that's just your bad luck.

I guess it's an approach.

 

Yes, more of the same stuff that we have seen. Kind of like some computer software companies approach - "this is not a problem, it is a feature of the program". George was trying really hard to convince everyone that swelling of o-rings is actually good for the fuel systems. Then why would the various manufacturers go to such great lengths to actually specify permitted variations of o-rings? 

My hope is that we will be given a choice of what UL fuel to purchase for our planes, rather than being forced to buy stuff that causes damage. For so long as other options are available I am not putting this stuff in my plane. 

  • Like 3
Posted

That varnish build up the dip stick on that Bonanza makes me think it may not be fine for your engine, but that possibly  will take hundreds or thousands of hours to manifest.

If there was going to be a problem with the G100 fuel I didn’t expect them to surface for a long time as none of the testing I’m aware of went for years and to TBO, I was very surprised several surfaced right out of the gate. I’m thinking the formulation of what’s being sold is different than what was tested, I theorize that the formulation is sort of loose meaning pretty wide tolerances in percentages of each component or possibly allows different formulations with I assume Octane being the driver. But that’s unfounded speculation.

I don’t see how you can fix the problems myself, what kind of fuel cells will survive it, or are we supposed to accept say a five year or less life of cells and tank sealant, paint etc. I think it’s going to start eating boost pump seals and every non metal part it come into contact with.

Posted (edited)
5 hours ago, A64Pilot said:

That varnish build up the dip stick on that Bonanza makes me think it may not be fine for your engine, but that possibly  will take hundreds or thousands of hours to manifest.

If there was going to be a problem with the G100 fuel I didn’t expect them to surface for a long time as none of the testing I’m aware of went for years and to TBO, I was very surprised several surfaced right out of the gate. I’m thinking the formulation of what’s being sold is different than what was tested, I theorize that the formulation is sort of loose meaning pretty wide tolerances in percentages of each component or possibly allows different formulations with I assume Octane being the driver. But that’s unfounded speculation.

I don’t see how you can fix the problems myself, what kind of fuel cells will survive it, or are we supposed to accept say a five year or less life of cells and tank sealant, paint etc. I think it’s going to start eating boost pump seals and every non metal part it come into contact with.

I have never in 10 years of flying and 2 aircrafts one was a 1958 J35 had worried about 100LL staining or chewing through parts. When I got my J35 it had a huge blue stain cos the bladder was leaking, we replaced the bladder and wiped off the stain. 1-2 weeks with G100 and both thanks are leaking and the paint is stripped to the metal....and I am not the only one. 

it's coming for you.png

Edited by gabez
  • Like 1
  • Haha 1

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.