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#11
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Jet A you smell and put a drop on a white piece of paper. Avgas
evaporates, Jet A leaves a ring. Jeremy Lew wrote: Is this the kind of thing which can be caught by looking at the color of the fuel in the fuel tester? I don't know the color of Jet A, but I was taught to look for the blue color and that if two kinds of fuel are mixed it all turns gray. Anyone know if in practice this would be easily detectable in the fuel strainer? |
#12
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jsmith opined
Jet A you smell and put a drop on a white piece of paper. Avgas evaporates, Jet A leaves a ring. Some of the newest testers have a ball that sinks in Avgas and floats in JetA (and water). Jeremy Lew wrote: Is this the kind of thing which can be caught by looking at the color of the fuel in the fuel tester? I don't know the color of Jet A, but I was taught to look for the blue color and that if two kinds of fuel are mixed it all turns gray. Anyone know if in practice this would be easily detectable in the fuel strainer? -ash Cthulhu for President! Why vote for a lesser evil? |
#13
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Jeremy Lew wrote:
Is this the kind of thing which can be caught by looking at the color of the fuel in the fuel tester? I don't know the color of Jet A, but I was taught to look for the blue color and that if two kinds of fuel are mixed it all turns gray. Anyone know if in practice this would be easily detectable in the fuel strainer? Please, please go DO the EXPERIMENT. It does NOT TURN GRAY! The CHEMISTRY of the colored fuels will turn them CLEAR when mixed. Mixing 100LL and Jet A will look very light blue, but smell wrong and feel oily. Best regards, Jer/ "Flight instruction and mountain flying are my vocation!" Eberhard -- Jer/ (Slash) Eberhard, Mountain Flying Aviation, LTD, Ft Collins, CO CELL 970 231-6325 EMAIL jer'at'frii.com WEB http://users.frii.com/jer/ C-206 N9513G, CFII Airplane&Glider, FAA-DEN Aviation Safety Counselor CAP-CO Mission&Aircraft CheckPilot, BM218 HAM N0FZD, 197 Young Eagles! |
#14
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Mixing fuels (and associated dyes) doesn't do anything weird
chemistry-wise. 100LL + JetA will just dilute the blue dye and the mixture will look a light blue like Jer said. So if you mix 80 + 100LL you get purple (red + blue). Try it, no fuel dye combination makes gray. -lance smith wrote in message ... Jeremy Lew wrote: Is this the kind of thing which can be caught by looking at the color of the fuel in the fuel tester? I don't know the color of Jet A, but I was taught to look for the blue color and that if two kinds of fuel are mixed it all turns gray. Anyone know if in practice this would be easily detectable in the fuel strainer? Please, please go DO the EXPERIMENT. It does NOT TURN GRAY! The CHEMISTRY of the colored fuels will turn them CLEAR when mixed. Mixing 100LL and Jet A will look very light blue, but smell wrong and feel oily. Best regards, Jer/ "Flight instruction and mountain flying are my vocation!" Eberhard |
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