We study the stability of orbits between Jupiter and Saturn in the planar case, with Jupiter and Saturn represented by fixed ellipses. In the band of long-lived orbits centered on 1.35 and 1.45 Jovian distances, we find some orbits that survive for longer than 800,000 Jupiter periods, although most do not. A careful examination of the consequences of inaccuracies in the numerical integration on the stability of orbits shows that stable orbits remain stable even when we degrade the accuracy by a factor of a quarter of a million. Thus we believe that the long-delayed onset of instability is a consequence of the celestial mechanics and not an artifact of the numerical integration. We routinely calculated Lyapunov exponents and found a correlation between the Lyapunov time and the time to cross the orbit of one of the planets, but the Lyapunov times were typically much shorter (by a factor of 100 or more). © 1990.