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Wed, Jul 27, 2011

Swift Enterprises Ready To Go To Market ... If FAA Was Ready

FAA Funding Issue Cancels FAA ARC Update At AirVenture

By John Ylinen

Swift Enterprises provided a forum update Tuesday on their Swift Fuel project. Jon Ziulkowski and Brian Stirm gave the forum an update on the problems with the current 100LL fuel and how their SwiftFuel or 100SF. Ziulkowski said that “their fuel is the only unleaded fuel ever that exceeds the 100 MOM”. On 1 May 2011, Swift Enterprise received ATSM approval for D7719 specification.

The FAA ARC was formed and held their first meeting in March. They have meet as full committee 3 times. The ARC was scheduled to provide an update at AirVenture; but that presentation was cancelled due to the FAA funding. It is hoped that the presentation will be rescheduled for the AOPA Summit.
Swift Enterprises also announced that they had secured two Midwest producers to make a test production run of between 100,000 and 500,000 gallons of test fuel. When asked what the price per gallon for this test run would be; they declined to provide exact price per gallon, but said “It would be significantly less than current 100LL prices.”

When asked when the fuel would be available at the pump, Mr. Ziulkowski said that he hoped the ARC could complete their project and hoped for fuel at pump by EOY. He indicated the major issue that needed to be decided was what process the FAA would use to allow certified aircraft to use fuel other than 100LL. He hoped that it would not be individual STC for each aircraft/type but some fleet wide approval.

Mr. Ziulkowski said that all of their testing has been very positive and no concerns have surfaced on changing to the swift fuel in current production and high performance aircraft. The fuel is showing a MOM of up to 104 and it could be produced higher. It provides more energy than 100LL and when stored for long periods of time; the MOM actually goes up unlike 100LL. Swift has not found any degradation to glass aircraft tanks or any seals. He indicated that there were not requirements to make any changes to the aircraft, but that over time, aircraft and engine manufactures could also change some of their hardware to make the engine and aircraft perform even better than current 100LL. More power would mean that most aircraft could have updated POH performance data. The fuel weighs slightly higher than 100LL, but that their testing at FBO pumps has shown that much of the current 100LL weights more than the average 6 lbs per gallon.

FMI: www.swiftenterprises.com

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