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On Apr 28, 9:09 am, Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article . com, wrote: On Apr 27, 6:34 pm, "Morgans" wrote: "JGalban via AviationKB.com" wrote That's what I figured. Turbocharged engines are a different kettle of fish. The main reason is the higher temperatures in the induction system lowers the detonation margin considerably. Not just the temp, but the pressures involved. In a turbo, not producing boost, a low compression ratio is fine with low octane gas. When the boost is putting all of that extra air and gas into the combustion chamber, it is still compressing at the same ratio. You end up with the normal internal pressure, plus the extra pressure the turbo boost shoved in there. Then detonation becomes a big problem, without the extra octane. But you knew all of that, already. g -- Jim in NC If the engine is turbo "normalized", it never increases the boost above what the engine would see at sea level power, right? That's why turbo aircarft engines are rated at the same max power as non turbo engines. If the engine doesn't need high octane gas at sea level, why would it need it at altitude where the cylinder pressures are no higher (merely boosted back to sea level MP). Am I confused? Regards, Bud Even turbo normalizing increases the temperature of the fuel/air mix entering the cylinders, due to compression of the air to achieve "normal" pressures. The increased temperature increases the octane requirements, all by itself.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Never disagreed with this. It is the assertion that the turbo "is putting all of that extra air and gas into the combustion chamber" that is of contention. The total mass of fuel (air + gas) the cylinder injests is the same as a normally aspirated engine at sea level. That is why having a good fuel flow guage is such an important factor in running lean of peak, and is a major part of TAT turbo installations. Heck, when doing the lean test they recommend, monitoring fuel flow is the primary issue. The poster said it is "not just the temp". It is. It is also why intercoolers are so nice. They reduce the work the turbo has to do, and increase the detonation margin without lowering power output. Regards, Bud |
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On 2007-04-27 11:52:18 -0700, "Matt Barrow"
said: "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007042709185616807-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-04-26 05:36:04 -0700, ktbr said: C J Campbell wrote: Okay, doing some further checking, Democrats controlled both houses in 2005. The Dems had a 26-23 majority in the Senate and a 55-43 majority in the House. Well in the eyes of Democrats thats a landslide. It certainly is when you consider that Al was saying that the Republicans controlled both houses. It was the Democrats who passed the gas tax increase that takes effect on July 1 in Washington, not the Republicans. Algore, Kerry and Hillary have all said (when addressing the appropriate audiences) that we should be paying $5.00 a gallon and taxes should be raised accordingly. Wow! More money to **** away. They do. And when a loaf of bread costs $10 because that is what it costs to farm and transport the wheat, grind it into flour and transport that to the baker, bake it and transport the finished loaves to the store, they will blame the greedy farmers. But it won't matter because no on will be able to drive to the store to buy the bread anyway. After the food riots then, no doubt, they will have even better programs to save us. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007042815125816807-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-04-27 11:52:18 -0700, "Matt Barrow" said: "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007042709185616807-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-04-26 05:36:04 -0700, ktbr said: C J Campbell wrote: Okay, doing some further checking, Democrats controlled both houses in 2005. The Dems had a 26-23 majority in the Senate and a 55-43 majority in the House. Well in the eyes of Democrats thats a landslide. It certainly is when you consider that Al was saying that the Republicans controlled both houses. It was the Democrats who passed the gas tax increase that takes effect on July 1 in Washington, not the Republicans. Algore, Kerry and Hillary have all said (when addressing the appropriate audiences) that we should be paying $5.00 a gallon and taxes should be raised accordingly. Wow! More money to **** away. They do. And when a loaf of bread costs $10 because that is what it costs to farm and transport the wheat, grind it into flour and transport that to the baker, bake it and transport the finished loaves to the store, they will blame the greedy farmers. But it won't matter because no on will be able to drive to the store to buy the bread anyway. After the food riots then, no doubt, they will have even better programs to save us. It becomes a vicious circle. http://preview.tinyurl.com/22yeyo |
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On Apr 27, 6:40 pm, "Matt Barrow"
wrote: I have seen this 30%/70% number repeatedly, but I don't remember it ever came from a scientific survey, or just someones rough estimate. FAA figures. Care to provide the source (URL of the original data)? That has contributed to the big decline of overall 100LL consumption in U.S. Do you have a cite for that last one? What's the GA activity level over the past few years? Year US Avgas production and import (thousand barrels) 1999 7485 2000 6648 2001 7121 2002 6584 2003 6255 2004 6295 source: http://www.indexmundi.com/en/commodi...ly_monthly.htm |
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On Apr 27, 6:40 pm, "Matt Barrow"
wrote: That has contributed to the big decline of overall 100LL consumption in U.S. Do you have a cite for that last one? This is an even better source showing the decline of 100LL consumption: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/a403600001m.htm |
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![]() "M" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 27, 6:40 pm, "Matt Barrow" wrote: I have seen this 30%/70% number repeatedly, but I don't remember it ever came from a scientific survey, or just someones rough estimate. FAA figures. Care to provide the source (URL of the original data)? That has contributed to the big decline of overall 100LL consumption in U.S. Do you have a cite for that last one? What's the GA activity level over the past few years? Year US Avgas production and import (thousand barrels) 1999 7485 2000 6648 2001 7121 2002 6584 2003 6255 2004 6295 source: http://www.indexmundi.com/en/commodi...ly_monthly.htm Try "Operating Hours". It's only in the past year or so that hours flown is recovering to pre-2001 levels. Hell, just look at your 2003-2004 numbers. |
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![]() "M" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 27, 6:40 pm, "Matt Barrow" wrote: That has contributed to the big decline of overall 100LL consumption in U.S. Do you have a cite for that last one? This is an even better source showing the decline of 100LL consumption: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/a403600001m.htm Do you understand correlation vs causation? |
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On Apr 29, 1:46 pm, "Matt Barrow"
wrote: This is an even better source showing the decline of 100LL consumption: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/a403600001m.htm Do you understand correlation vs causation? You're simply arguing without any solid number. Just because you believe 100LL still has a bright future doesn't mean it's true. |
#90
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![]() "M" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 29, 1:46 pm, "Matt Barrow" wrote: This is an even better source showing the decline of 100LL consumption: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/a403600001m.htm Do you understand correlation vs causation? You're simply arguing without any solid number. Just because you believe 100LL still has a bright future doesn't mean it's true. I never said 100LL had a bright future. I figure inside ten years and it'll be banned. , for one, would love to invest in TAT and their PRISM system. MOF, even if 100LL enjoys a long and fruitful life, I'd put a PRISM system on my airplane the moment the STC is signed. NTL, You're about oh-for-five in comprehension, on just about every aspect. One last time: show me flight hours, not any irrelevant numbers you can pull out of your ass without a context and you might make a small point. You say the 70-30 ration has been falling for ten years. You've come up with several unrelated numbers to substantiate your point, such as number of gallons sold, which does not take into effect the effect of the fall off in economic activity. If you can't avoid going off on tangents, or putting round pegs in square holes, there's no point in me following up. In sum: you can ext -- Matt Barrow Performace Homes, LLC. Colorado Springs, COract your foot from your mouth and get off your agenda anytime. |
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