Fuel sensitivity of gaseous emissions, approach to lean blowout and combustion dynamics are evaluated in this study. Experiments were conducted at the NASA Glenn Research Center's CE-5 flame tube test facility with a 9-point Swirl-Venturi Lean Direct Injection (SV-LDI) combustor. A reference jet fuel (A2) and two test fuels (C1 and C3) from were provided by the National Jet Fuels Combustion Program (NJFCP). C1 is essentially a 2-component iso-paraffin test fuel with a low cetane number of 17, and C3 is a high viscosity test fuel. Approach to lean blowout was monitored in terms of the rapid increase in CO emissions index as equivalence ratio decreased, but testing did not proceed all the way to lean blowout (LBO). Burning C1 was found to produce lower NOx emissions, but C1 flame temperatures were about 25 K higher relative to A2 at near LBO points (where CO emissions increased very rapidly). The NOx emissions of C3 were similar to A2. At low power conditions where fuel injector performance is not optimized for this 9-point LDI combustor, C3 had higher CO emissions than A2 and C1, likely due to C3's higher viscosity relative to A2 and C1. No discernable difference in combustion dynamics was observed between the three fuels tested in the 9-point LDI combustor. While a systematic ignition test campaign was not conducted, it was observed that C1 required a higher equivalence ratio and inlet air temperature for test rig ignition compared to A2 and C3.