by Zach Grant L1011jock » Sun Jun 27, 2010 3:13 pm
OK,
Lets look at this with all the info before I shoot my mouth off again. You have NEW bladders (all 4?) or rebuilt? The fuel that is "green" is coming out of the fuel strainer...both or just one wing, or one tank? Are the tanks full or left partially empty? Where are you located? Is the plane hangared or outside? What kind of fuel caps do you have, and are the TIGHT? How often do you fly/refuel? Are you adding anything to the fuel (MML or like)? Is this the first tank of fuel since new bladders?
The dye used in the fuel is blue dye. It can combine with yellow varnish, or other oil substances that look yellow, and you get green! Many sealants will give off yellow tints to solvents. Also extreme evaporation will cause an elevated concentration of dye (fuel evaporates, dye doesn't demonstrated by blue fuel stains) and this looks very dark blue, and can look green in some drain sampler glasses. If you are in the habit of leaving tanks mostly empty, have a hot climate and a poorly sealing gas cap, you can evaporate all of the gass in a tank in less than a week. It leaves behind all of the old dye and varnish (yellowy brown), and when you refuel, voila you get really green fuel! More than not this happens with old bladders as the evaporation happens through the bladders.
-Zach
"Keep it above 5 feet and don't do nuthin dumb!"