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Science & Technology
How High-Octane Gasoline Saved Untold Allied Pilots During WWII
2022-02-25
[Royal Society of Chemistry] In the year that sees the 70th anniversary of the outbreak of the Second World War, a previously untold story has emerged of how, through a "miracle" chemical breakthrough, Spitfire and Hurricane fighters gained the edge over German fighters to win the Battle of Britain.

An American scientist and author has claimed that the famed pair of war-winning aeroplanes gained superior altitude, manoeuvrability and rate of climb by a revolutionary high-octane fuel supplied to Britain by the USA just in time for the battle.

Books, documentaries, and movies have chronicled the brilliant contribution of UK designers and engineers behind the legendary fighter planes that won the Battle of Britain, preventing invasion of the British Isles.

The courage and sacrifice of RAF pilots who flew the aeroplanes is rightly celebrated and their bravery has become an inspirational chapter of the British national story.

What has not been known until now, however, is the story of the revolutionary aviation fuel supplied to the RAF by an American company, using a process invented by a Frenchman, without which Spitfires and Hurricanes might not have achieved crucial dominance over the Luftwaffe.

The Royal Society of Chemistry read the claims about Eugene Houdry, and his process at the Sun Oil Company, in a paper written originally for the journal Invention and Technology by American science writer Tim Palucka.

The introduction to the paper by Palucka says of Houdry: "His miraculous catalyst turned nearly worthless sludge into precious high-octane gasoline and helped the Allies to win World War II."

He continued: "That process would make a crucial difference in mid-1940 when the Royal Air Force started filling its Spitfires and Hurricanes with the 100-octane gasoline imported from the United States instead of the 87-octane gasoline it had formerly used."

The RSC is inviting experts and the public to challenge the new claim and if it remains intact then the society will send the report to aviation and military historians to mark the newly-discovered contribution of chemists to victory in one of the key battles.

Eugene Houdry, born in France, developed, after settling in the USA, one of the earliest catalysts to convert useless crude oil into high octane fuel. He revealed the "cracking" process at a Chicago chemicals conference in 1938

The 100-octane fuel that resulted from the Houdry Process increased the Spitfire's speed by 25 mph at sea level by 34 mph at 10,000 feet.

This extra speed gave the British fighters in the summer of 1940 the edge over the Luftwaffe above the English Channel and in the skies of London and south-east England.

With the balance tipped towards the British, the German invasion was abandoned and Hitler turned eastwards, allowing the UK armed forces time to regroup and to revive.

"Luftwaffe pilots couldn't believe they were facing the same planes they had fought successfully over France a few months before. The planes were the same but the fuel wasn't," said Palucka.

Tim Palucka says that in the 1943 book The Amazing Petroleum Industry, V A Kalichevsky of the Socony-Vacuum Oil Company explained what high-octane gasoline meant to Britain. Kalichevsky wrote:

"It is an established fact that a difference of only 13 points in octane number made possible the defeat of the Luftwaffe by the RAF in the fall of 1940. This difference, slight as its seems, is sufficient to give a plane the vital edge in altitude, rate of climb and manoeuvrability that spells the difference between defeat and victory.
Posted by:Besoeker

#8  Burning overpriced fuel in it just wastes your money

During the first Gulf war the Saudis supplied gasoline. It was 100 octane. Our vehicles run on Mogas, which means they can use diesel or gas or combination depending on available supply. The mechanics said that those who were burning the Saudi stuff had the cleanest engines they'd ever encountered in maintenance. Check your mpg between blends yourself, not what someone tells your. Then do the math.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2022-02-25 13:36  

#7  
The "Clean Green Fuel" for the 21st Century and Beyond
Posted by: Jack Hatfield3918   2022-02-25 10:56  

#6  I get most of what you can get out of my old Jeep Liberty by always filling at half a tank and alternating between regular and mid-grade. Past that, I'm into custom eproms or a fancy touch screen engine management system. Neither of which makes any sense ay all for that vehicle.
Posted by: M. Murcek    2022-02-25 10:04  

#5  Know your machine. Burning overpriced fuel in it just wastes your money. In the old days, you could do a certain amount with timing. Now that it's all "black box," a lot more is possible but you won't be doing it for yourself at home.
Posted by: M. Murcek    2022-02-25 10:01  

#4  advantage from the higher octane?

Should You Run Premium Gas In Your Motorcycle? Octane Explained | The Shop Manual
Posted by: Skidmark   2022-02-25 09:46  

#3  Now, if the aeroplanes had been electric...
Posted by: Skidmark   2022-02-25 09:42  

#2  The planes were the same but the fuel wasn't
Wouldn't they have had to change the timing or increase the compression to get an advantage from the higher octane?
Posted by: Glenmore   2022-02-25 09:31  

#1  It boosted the Merlin engines power by 25%.
Posted by: Angaiper Ulavins1210   2022-02-25 06:47  

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