Yes. Dad's '76 182 was designed for 80/87 and ran that all the way up to their getting rid of the red stuff.
How did the large radials that needed 115/145 purple stuff, how did they get them to run efficiently on 100LL? Anti-detonation additives mainly?
Reduced manifold pressure. When we ran a big old Sikorsky S-58 with a big-old R2800 in the nose, we had to really pull back the power we pulled when we ran 100LL.
But to address some of the other issues.
100LL is the huge, pink elephant in the room for GA. This is huge.
A couple of points:
1) 100 octane from your local tuner shop is in NO WAY equivilent to 100 octane 100LL. Beyond all the nit noid details, like vapor pressure, stability, etc, the way octane is computed is really different.
The label you see on your favorite gas station is the AKI, or anti knock index, which is an average of reseach octane number and the motor octane number.
Avgas octane, on the other hand usually has two numbers: An aviation rich, and an aviation lean octane (which is close to the motor octane number). This is why, in general, you saw Avgas have two ratings in the past (eg 100/130, 115/145, 80/87, etc).
If you tested 100LL to the same standard as autogas, you'd get a AKI of around 115. Avgas also has an extremely tight specification...even min spec avgas is an order of magnitude tigher than autogas.
2) Which brings me to my next point. Autogas is crap. Really. Thanks to ethanol, gas producers have been able to relax their specs on autogas. While ethanol is a really, really crappy fuel by itself, it also has a VERY high octane rating. This allows gas producers to produce really crappy petrol feedstock, and then artificially elevate the octane with up to %10 ethanol.
100LL's days are numbered, and not because of the tree huggers. Studies admit that the lead output from GA is practically indistinguishable from background "noise" in the envrionment.
But 100LL sales have been decreasing year over year. It requires a completely segregated production and distribution system. And there is exactly 1 (one) plant in the entire world that produces tetra-ethyl lead, the stuff that gives 100LL (and all leaded fuels) its awesome anti-detenation properties. If that plant goes blooey, its all over but the shouting.
Economics will kill 100LL before the greenies do.
94UL is not an answer. Even with electronic ignition, just about every engine that requires it will have to operate at reduced power. Take that POH and throw it out the window while you wait for Cessna, Beech and Piper to recertify every aircraft and variant with new performance numbers. For defunct builders, that wait will be forever.
Think this just affects turbocharged engines? Wrong. Contiental IO-360s (Mooneys), O-470U (182s) and IO-520s (Bonanzas), certain variants of Lycomming O-540s (Dakotas, Saratogas) and just about all of the restart Cessnas have high compression cylinders (anything around 8.5:1) and require 100 octane as a minimum.
Even for older aircraft, you can toss that Autogas STC in the trash. Most, if not all of the autogas STCs mandate autogas with NO ethanol. Try to find autogas without it today. Remember economics above? Ethanol lets the refiners produce crappier gas.
So, what can you do? Hope is lost, right?
Well, there are ways to make a nice, tight 100 octane avgas that is unleaded. First, you start with a very decent gas production, with tight specs. That gets you to 94 octane.
Then you can add MTBE to it. That will get you to 100. BUT MTBE is really, really unpopular with the bunny lovers, since it has a habit of getting into the ground water REALLY easily and it stinks to high heaven when it does.
Or you can add ETBE to it. Not quite the same as MTBE, and not near as stinky. Also not quite as effective. I am pretty sure this is how the Sweeds get their no-lead AvGas to 96 octane. But if I recall from their website, even their 96 octane won't work in high compression engines like later model O-470s and O-540s.
Or you can add some funky organics to the gas, like benzene or some of the longer chain alcohols like butanol (4 carbons vs 2 on ethanol). Benzene is a carcinogen, so that will never happen, but some of the other stuff MAY. You can pull some of this stuff out of plant stock (thus you get the Swift Fuel) or you can synthesize it from other organics that come out of petrol feedstock (the G1000 route).
But if you allow me to put on my tin foil hat for a couple of sentences. A LOT of people wouldn't mind seeing GA go away. The governement, the TSA, homeowners and building developers (airports make GREAT housing developments...already graded) and the bunny mafia are only a few. The big BIG money has a vested interest in seeing GA become nothing larger than a oversized ultralight.
Getting rid of 100LL is a great way to do it. Diesel engines are a nice thought, but that's all it is. You going to refit a 50k engine into an airframe worth 50k?
With a huge amount of the fleet parked for no gas. Services will dry up. Whats left will be cost prohibitive. It will become a death spiral that GA won't recover from, at least not in the form we know of.
Richman