Diesel Fuel Lab provides jet fuel testing for Jet-A, Jet-A1, and other aviation turbine fuels against ASTM D1655 specification requirements — the standard that defines minimum quality requirements for aviation turbine fuel from production to the aircraft. Our testing is conducted through Sterling Analytical (sterlinganalytical.com), delivering ASTM-certified laboratory analysis for fixed-base operators (FBOs), fuel distributors, fuel terminals, airports, and aircraft operators who need documented fuel quality data for incoming fuel verification, contamination investigation, or quality assurance records.
Aviation fuel testing occupies a different risk tier than any other petroleum fuel testing service we offer. The consequence of fuel quality failure in an aircraft fuel system is categorically different from the consequence of fuel quality failure in a diesel generator or a commercial truck: the margin between an undetected contamination event in aviation fuel and a catastrophic outcome is far narrower, and the regulatory and liability stakes reflect that. This is why jet fuel testing exists at multiple checkpoints through the fuel supply chain — production, terminal release, receiving at FBOs, and pre-fueling verification — rather than as an annual compliance exercise.
ASTM D1655: The Standard That Governs Jet Fuel Quality
ASTM D1655, Standard Specification for Aviation Turbine Fuels, is the governing quality standard for commercial jet fuel in the United States and, through adoption and harmonization with DEF STAN 91-091 and IATA guidance, effectively worldwide for Jet-A and Jet-A1. First published in 1959 following the rapid commercial aviation expansion after World War II, D1655 defines the minimum property requirements that Jet-A and Jet-A1 must satisfy for both civil and military aircraft operations.
The fuel that destroyed that injector — contaminated with water, harboring a growing microbial colony, carrying particulate that scored the precision-machined injector tip across thousands of duty cycles — never appears in the maintenance report. There’s no line item for “fuel quality event.” There’s no way for the fleet manager looking at a year of maintenance spending to see that three injector failures and two filter change intervals last summer were all caused by the same contaminated bulk fuel tank.
An important limitation built into ASTM D1655 is worth understanding upfront: the standard itself explicitly states that it does not define the quality assurance testing and procedures necessary to ensure that fuel in the distribution system continues to comply with the specification after batch certification. This is not a gap in the standard — it’s a deliberate acknowledgment that distribution chain quality assurance requires a separate, layered testing approach. The implication is that a production-stage D1655 batch certification tells you the fuel was in spec when it left the terminal. It does not tell you what happened to it in a pipeline, truck, storage tank, or hydrant system between there and the aircraft.
This is exactly where FBO incoming testing, terminal receiving verification, and periodic quality assurance testing close the gap that D1655 batch certification cannot.
Jet-A vs. Jet-A1: The Distinction That Matters for Testing
Both Jet-A and Jet-A1 are kerosene-range hydrocarbon fuels covering roughly C8 to C16 carbon chain lengths, both with flash points above 38°C, and both specified under ASTM D1655. The primary difference that’s operationally relevant:
The lower freeze point requirement for Jet-A1 reflects its design for long-range and polar route operations where fuel sitting in wing tanks at high altitude for extended periods must remain pumpable at temperatures that would gel Jet-A. Most aircraft operated internationally are certified for Jet-A1; most domestic U.S. operations use Jet-A. The same ASTM D1655 specification covers both grades, with different limits applying to each grade for freeze point and certain other properties.
For testing purposes, this means laboratory results should be interpreted against the correct grade limits for the specific fuel being evaluated — a Jet-A freeze point result that’s acceptable for a domestic carrier may not clear the Jet-A1 limit required for a transatlantic operation on the same aircraft.
Why Aviation Fuel Fails: The Primary Contamination and Quality Concerns
Aviation fuel quality failures fall into three categories: contamination (something foreign enters the fuel), degradation (the fuel’s own chemistry changes over time), and specification deviation (the fuel was never in spec, or a handling error changed it). The consequences differ, but all three require laboratory analysis to detect reliably.
The Complete ASTM D1655 Jet Fuel Testing Panel
Parameter | ASTM Method | D1655 Limit (Jet-A) | Significance |
Flash Point | D93 | 38°C minimum | Safety & contamination detection |
Distillation (T10, T50, T90, FBP) | D86 | Multiple limits | Fuel volatility and composition |
Density / Specific Gravity | D1298, D4052 | 775–840 kg/m³ | Energy content, metering |
Freeze Point | D2386 | −40°C maximum | Cold-altitude operability |
Viscosity | D445 | 8 mm²/s max at −20°C | Cold-weather atomization |
Net Heat of Combustion | D4809, D3338 | 42.8 MJ/kg minimum | Energy delivery to engine |
Naphthalenes | D1840 | 3.0% v/v maximum | Combustion quality |
Aromatics | D1319 | 25.0% v/v maximum | Thermal stability, seal swell |
Sulfur Content | D1266, D2622, D5453 | 0.30% mass maximum | Corrosion, emissions |
Mercaptan Sulfur | D3227 | 0.003% mass maximum | Seal and elastomer compatibility |
Thermal Stability (JFTOT) | D3241 | ≤3 tube rating; ≤25 mmHg pressure drop | Engine deposit formation |
Water Separation (WSIM) | D3948 | 85 minimum (Jet-A) | Surfactant/emulsifier detection |
Existent Gum | D381 | 7 mg/100 mL maximum | Storage stability |
Particulate Contamination | D5452 | 1 mg/L maximum | Filter and fuel system protection |
Electrical Conductivity | D2624 | 50–600 pS/m | Static dissipation safety |
Acidity | D3242 | 0.015 mg KOH/g maximum | Corrosion prevention |
Additional parameters including lubricity (D5001), undissolved water (D3240), and detailed sulfur speciation may be required for specific applications, military fuel grades, or investigation purposes.
Who Needs Jet Fuel Testing
The Supply Chain Testing Gap That ASTM D1655 Doesn't Cover
The most important thing to understand about ASTM D1655 batch certification is what it doesn’t cover: everything that happens after the fuel is certified at the point of origin.
Aviation fuel travels from refinery to pipeline to terminal to truck to FBO to aircraft — five or more custody transfers, each with its own opportunity for contamination, equipment error, or quality deviation. A D1655 Certificate of Analysis from the terminal confirms that the fuel was in specification at the terminal. It tells you nothing about whether water entered the fuel truck’s tank through an improperly sealed fill cover, whether a particulate filter at the FBO was past its service life, or whether residual cleaning chemicals in a newly cleaned storage tank introduced surfactants that drop the WSIM water separation rating below specification.
This is why aviation fuel quality assurance programs test fuel at multiple points through the distribution chain — not because any single entity in the chain is assumed to be careless, but because the chain has enough steps that each step needs verification. Our jet fuel testing services provide that verification at whatever point in the chain you’re responsible for.
How to Submit a Jet Fuel Sample
Standard turnaround: 3–5 business days. Rush turnaround available for time-sensitive situations.
Testing conducted through Sterling Analytical, established 1957, West Springfield, Massachusetts.
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