Personally I wouldn't run that in anything. Breathing lead fumes is not healthy. I know it says low lead but it has a lot in it. We have 90 octane ethanol free fuel here. I mix it 32:1 with amsoil dominator in all my 2 strokes and my stihl 4 mix polesaw.My owners manuals say to run unleaded gas, but ... Just wondering if anyone here has used 100LL Av Gas in a Stihl 4-mix or 2 stroke? If so, your impression??
I guess if I were to be worried about it I'd run mostly battery powered equipment, or at minimum Honda 4 stroke lead anchors.Personally I wouldn't run that in anything. Breathing lead fumes is not healthy. I know it says low lead but it has a lot in it. We have 90 octane ethanol free fuel here. I mix it 32:1 with amsoil dominator in all my 2 strokes and my stihl 4 mix polesaw.
My owners manuals say to run unleaded gas, but ... Just wondering if anyone here has used 100LL Av Gas in a Stihl 4-mix or 2 stroke? If so, your impression??
Personally I wouldn't run that in anything. Breathing lead fumes is not healthy. I know it says low lead but it has a lot in it. We have 90 octane ethanol free fuel here. I mix it 32:1 with amsoil dominator in all my 2 strokes and my stihl 4 mix polesaw.
One of my commercial customers ran leaded fuel in his trimmers for a bit and then spent the next couple years cleaning little balls of lead from the spark plug electrode gap, even after switching back to pump gas.My owners manuals say to run unleaded gas, but ... Just wondering if anyone here has used 100LL Av Gas in a Stihl 4-mix or 2 stroke? If so, your impression??
Gee! That's bad.One of my commercial customers ran leaded fuel in his trimmers for a bit and then spent the next couple years cleaning little balls of lead from the spark plug electrode gap, even after switching back to pump gas.
One of my commercial customers ran leaded fuel in his trimmers for a bit and then spent the next couple years cleaning little balls of lead from the spark plug electrode gap, even after switching back to pump gas.
Yep, that’s why some people change airplane plugs at 25 hours.Gee! That's bad.
How about carbon? Is it worse than unleaded?It does not deposit as "little balls", but as a coating of red lead oxide. A brush or emery cloth and the plug is good as new. It does not build inside a saw and "last for years"
I wear gloves fixing saws that run 100LL.
They are working on lead free AV gas. Current AV gas mix is ~4-5 less expensive than canned fuels. Current local airport price is $5.40/gal
How about carbon? Is it worse than unleaded?
Using Avgas (like 100LL) in most 2-stroke engines is bad because its high octane and slow burn rate lead to spark plug fouling, sluggish performance, and deposits, while its lead content fouls plugs and can harm components, unlike the ideal ethanol-free pump gas designed for them. It doesn't vaporize well in lower-compression engines, causing issues, and while good for high-performance, tuned engines, it's generally not recommended for standard use due to these drawbacks.
Thanks.Using Avgas (like 100LL) in most 2-stroke engines is bad because its high octane and slow burn rate lead to spark plug fouling, sluggish performance, and deposits, while its lead content fouls plugs and can harm components, unlike the ideal ethanol-free pump gas designed for them. It doesn't vaporize well in lower-compression engines, causing issues, and while good for high-performance, tuned engines, it's generally not recommended for standard use due to these drawbacks.
10-4 thanks.I used to think the additional lead would help cool and cushion the valves. It was used as an anti-knock compound in autos (and aircraft as well) and worked great,at that. In the ope I see here the lead has built up to a point where the valves no longer seal. The engine won’t start. You can work the valves in and out with Kroil in the combustion chamber and sometimes knock enough loose that the engine starts. After running a tank of unleaded thru it it runs and will once again start.
The 100 Low Lead fuel contains SEVEN times the lead in it that Premium auto gas used to have in it. That’s a lot of lead. Most normally aspirated aircraft engines can be run on car gas, however, turbo equipped engines cannot be. Airplane engines (even the small ones) have huge valves and the lead is helpful in sealing and cooling and if it’s supercharged, absolutely necessary for the higher pressures developed in those “air cooled” cylinders. I wrecked an air cooled VW engine while experimenting with 100LL. It burned a valve so bad it fell back into the cylinder. It burned because the lead prevented the heat transfer from the valve to the head . Big mess. The other intake valves on that engine were impacted by lead at the seat. I mean almost stuck in the seat.
With your high octane engine requirement you have few choices but there is one available and as soon as I can remember what’s it’s called I’ll tell you. I used 1 quart to a tank of gas in the summer in my blown Corvette. I’m pretty sure Tolulene is a component. I remember it cost $50 for a 5 gal can. I’ll get back to you.




