I'm not a chemistry "guy" (took one chem class in college many years ago) so I was hoping I could get some help to a problem I have here.
I've been trying to precisely figure out the weight and balance of a model airplane. One of the variables is the fuel used. It's woefully inconsistent from manufacturer to manufacturer. But, the ingredients are pretty much the same. Methanol, Nitromethane, and Castor oil. What changes is the amounts of each and whether the ingredients were mixed by volume or by weight. Also, model airplane engines don't fair well with lots of water in the fuel so the Methanol is dehydrated as much as is probably possible in a production environment.
Now I know you could just say "measure the weight on a scale" but I would have to do it for every fuel made so I was wondering if there's a way to figure out, or get at least a good estimate before purchasing. As an example, One manufacturer lists 1 gallon of fuel as containing 10%Nitromethane, 20%Castor oil, and the balance Methanol, mixed by volume. If I have a fuel tank that holds 10ounces of fuel by volume, will the fuel weigh 10oz? I'm thinking it won't but....
Thanks,
Mike