saviour stivala wrote: ↑19 Dec 2018, 12:16
“These old notes are much more extensive” Here is one more example, an extract example from 1955 M-B M196 2.6-l eight. “From a shopping list of 25 different fuel blends supplied by ESSO, 7 were tested, the best results, as a combination of power with fuel economy, were given by blend RD1, which contained 45% Benzol, 25% Methyl alcohol, 25% 110/130 Octane gasoline, 3% Acetone and 2% Nitro-benzene. Resistance to knocking at 12.5:1 compression ratio used was increased by addition of 0.03% by volume of Tetra-ethyl lead. Nitromethane additives were tried but not used because they were knock-sensitive.
Ho-hum !
Benzole was English for a benzene, toluene, and xylene mix (traditionally from distillation of coal tar)
110/130 ? global avgas specs were green 100/130, brown 108/135, and purple115/145 (though 110/130 counted as 100/130)
avgas would contain a lot of benzene, toluene, and/or xylene anyway
methyl alcohol has about 11% more heat (eg for 2498cc of MB air) than gasoline or its avgas fellows as above
acetone was for blend stability to prevent precipitation in a gasoline/alcohol blend of water carried by the alcohol
nitrobenzene at this level mainly a combustion accelerant
in 1958 100/130 (100L) avgas became mandatory for F1
(now 100L avgas has been replaced by blue 100LL - less TEL but still quite a lot)