Good Morning Folks, 
      I am sharing this story again as a warning to anyone with epoxy tanks. 
On the way back from the gathering in Tennessee I think in 2011, I chased the 
cold front home all day with landing multiple times to wait for it to move 
ahead of me. I ended up landing somewhere south of Harrisburg PA. about 10 min 
after the FBO closed and they had no self serve. A local took me to a sonoco 
and I got 5 gal of 93 oct.  (ya know the NAS Car racing fuel) and put in the 
header tank with several galllons of 100LL that was still in the tank. I flew 
for another 50 miles or so and had to call it for the night 50 miles from home. 
Left early the next morning and got home and to work before 7 am.  I think that 
I flew again on maybe Wednesday or Thursday of the same week and noticed a bit 
of roughness in the engine operation. My memory is a bit foggy on the details 
of why I started to investigate but at somepoint that weekend I looked into the 
header tank and the erosion of the gel coat inside the tank was so evident. 
There was a line exactly where the fuel level had been when I put the 5 gal of 
Sunoco in. There were glass cloth fibers exposed. I drained and cut tank open 
and repaired it, but started to wonder about the epoxy that had erroded off the 
inside. I tore down all the intake and aerocarb and found a coating of the 
epoxy (vinyl ester) inside all the intake tubes and in the carb. I pulled heads 
but it appeared that the epoxy that may have gotten to the cobustion chamber 
burned with the fuel. What a mess.  
     This was the first time that N357CJ had seen auto fuel in the 6 or 7 years 
of operations.  
I did try it at an airport in South Caolina at a Corvair college with non 
alcohol fuel and the engine ran so rough I drained it back out gave it to a 
local and filled up with 100LL. The plane never saw any auto fuel again. Mark 
L. has the plane now but to the best of my knowlege the wing tanks are still 
fine and the header tank has another 14 years or so on it Total of over 20 
years now. 
      My current build has aluminum tanks in the wings so that should not ever 
be an issue. The header tank was home built with just over 8 gal capacity and 
has had fuel in it for nearly 4 years now. I do look in every so often just for 
peace of mind. I for one will never take that risk again for the sake of 
roughly $2 a gallon difference. 
Like Larry always says "your results may vary" but I doubt it... 
Joe Horton 
Dr. Deans plane ready for inspection..N657CJ 
  
  
 
  
 
 
 

-----Original Message-----

From: Kayak <[email protected]>
To: KRnet <[email protected]>
Cc: Kayak <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, 4 December 2025 9:55 PM EST
Subject: KRnet> ethanol - anyone running it

 
is anyone here running ordinary e10 ethanol car gas?   
  
just throwing out the question because almost all cars (including old ones) are 
running on it, so it should be possible to accommodate it in an aircraft. 
another option is to have a tank with 100ll just for cristical flight phases 
like takeoff and climbout, and run the much cheaper car gas off the other tank 
for the cruise phase... 
  
       
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