Can I offer another solution? The real, cowboy, pick yourself up by the bootstraps, get'r done, rugged individualistic, we don't need no stickin' badges, no whine and cheeze, gumbint out to get us solution?There's basically 2 problems to solve.
1. Maintain detonation margin for high compression or forced induction engines.
2. Maintain compatibility with legacy GA fleet fuel systems (rubber).
The bureaucratic solution is to develop a blend of chemicals that is far more expensive, toxic, dangerous, and environmentally damaging then lead. And force you to use it.
A better solution would be to use ethanol, which any refinery can blend and ship much cheaper than the current 100ll (And cheaper still without fed and state road tax). Then remove the STC bureaucracy to make retrofit fuel systems affordable.
The right solution is to quit scaremongering and over stating the danger of leaded fuel. And remove the STC bureaucracy to make retrofit fuel systems affordable. This would let the market decide (how America is supposed to work).
Modify your fuel system to run car gas with any amount of ethanol, lower the compression if needed, and fly using gasoline you can get at the same pump you use to fill up your F-150. Done!
We've had over 50 years to solve this problem and we haven't. No one involved in aviation can say that they didn't see this day coming, yet they kept buying engines that only work with 100LL. Time to start a business converting all those Continental IO-550s to something that will burn car gas, or fix their fuel systems to not leak when exposed to a bit of aromatic fuels. As Braly has said a few times, the fuel he's developed is about the same as what they ran in the 1940s during WW2. Sure, those guys were smarter than us, and braver, but I guess we should be able to duplicate their fuel systems - ammirite?