Actually 25-30% 100LL should give you enough lead for valves, but that is only a temporary solution as 100LL is being phased out or getting increasingly difficult to get. The FAA has approved STC's to allow most general aviation aircraft to run on Autogas. I question some of the valve seat recession wisdom. John Deere offered propane 1010s did they have hardened valve seats 'cause propane has squat for lead, what about all the old distillate engines-did tractor fuel or distillate or TVO have lead? Last month there was a big discussion about modern fuels causing problems with red tractors with six cylinder engines, work 'em hard on autogas and they melt pistons. I've seen air-cooled engines (VWs and some Kohlers) having fuel related issues that caused exhaust valve failure, the seats were fine but got some stretch on the exhaust valves. This was when leaded gas was still available, a root cause was the engine running a little to lean. Back in the air-cooled VW's heyday a common cause of death was breaking #3 exhaust valve, the valve would stretch a bit, where the stem got thin it would break and the the valve head would bounce around in the cylinder spreading hate and discontent. It was always #3 because it was tucked in behind the oil cooler and ran a little hotter than the other cylinders so when you pushed it out to the edge #3 gave up first. If you were "lucky" some times you'd loose a small enough section on the valve face to not screw up to much before you got it shut down.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Hydraulics - The Basics - by Curtis Von Fange. Hydraulics was one of the greatest inventions for helping man compound the work he can do. It’s amazing how a little floor jack can lift tons and tons of weight with just the flick of a handle. What’s even more amazing is that all the principals of hydraulic theory can be wrapped up in such a small package. This same package applies to any hydraulic system from the largest bulldozer to the oldest and smallest tractor. This short series will take a look at the basic layout of a simple hydraul
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