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#1
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Lets discuss Ethanol
I have recently moved to Florida and I have found out that FL has a mandate that ALL gasoline must be blended with 10% ethanol. Which sucks because it makes my car run rough and, as all studies have shown, significantly lowers mileage. So, two things: What are some things I could do to counteract the effects of ethanol on mileage? Two, fight the blending trend!! It's bad for older vehicles. Find out if your state has mandates and help get them overturned. More importantly, what can I do? I have no access to any ethanol free gas.
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#2
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
Besides the drop in mileage my Bravada vapor locked this summer a few times from using ethanol. Shut it down hot and the fuel lines vapor locked, had to wait until it cooled down before it would restart. My Pontiac keeps throwing emmision trouble codes when using ethanol blends.
Our state AAA website lists stations that still have ethanol free gasoline but they are getting harder to find. Go to AAA.com and to the bottom of the page to put in your zip code and find your state club's web site. |
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#3
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
^ Florida, like Maryland, has mandated that ALL gasoline sold in the state be ethanol blended. That means he has to go out of state to get better gas, as do I. Pennsylvania has no such mandate, but it is getting harder and harder to find stations that sell non-ethanol blended.
Which sucks because none of my vehicles like the crap at all. And, to boot, we have emissions testing. And all my vehicles, though they still pass, are MUCH closer to the limits on ethanol crap. And this is supposed to be better for the environment.... |
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#4
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
I've been using E-10 since 1976. I've had no such problems in any of about 22 vehicles which I've owned (and can count) since then (7 of which I still own). Several of those were carbureted, with both "stupid" carburetors and feedbacks (like E4MEs), and a good number of those were/are injected. The 355 in my '50 pickup made 423HP at the crank on 93 octane E-10. If you aren't getting power or mileage, there is another reason. In my "limited" experience, mileage suffers no penalty until the amount of ethanol exceeds 22-25%, at which point it starts to drop if you haven't adjusted timing, coolant temperature, and compression to compensate.
Stop reading urban legend and start collecting real, empirical data. I keep a running fuel mileage log on all my DD vehicles, and I notice no drop in mileage from E-10 up to about E-30. Running E-85 in the summer only costs me about 11% in mileage, but when the price of E-85 is $2.25 and gasoline is $4.25, it's still a bargain to use the E-85. Perform the math based upon reality and hard data, and you can see the results for yourself. As for your specific problem,. I'm thinking that ethanol is not the issue. Gasoline evaporates at a much lower temperature than ethanol, and with a much higher vapor pressure (which is a big reason that high ethanol percentage fuel suck in colder weather). If the fuel lines actually vapor locked, it's because gasoline percolated/boiled, not ethanol. Moreover, if you understand your fuel system, you would also understand how that cannot happen on a modern EFI system. Fuel is pressurized at the source and excess liquid and any vapors are returned to the tank through the regulator and second line. The fuel pump is IN the tank, so please explain to me how the lines can vapor lock. I'm all ears...
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#5
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
Alky is here to stay and it doesn't light off as easily as gasoline and given the lower temperatures in Colorado...the temperatures are likely a factor.
Many NHRA Top Alcohol Funny Cars are started on gasoline. If fuel squirt is maxed due to lower fuel pressures of a worn fuel pump, a lean mix and cold too could get pretty miserable. Maybe a shot of compression with more ignition timing advance (advance the 4.3 distributor a few degrees) could recover some drivability. Maybe a shot of propane to get the engine started??? |
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#6
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
Starting is a problem once the temperature is in the 20s (is 15º here now). Even though the actual ethanol percentage is dropped by the blenders in winter months to as low as 50%, starting is harder. The ethanol just doesn't vaporize as easily, thus the point about vapor lock.
I can get away with 25% ethanol all winter long and have easy starts. Above that, it takes a little cranking compression heating to get things moving. Once it is going, there are not a lot of problems other than more moisture in the crankcase, requiring complete warmup or more frequent oil changes.
__________________
Permanent seat assignment on the Group W bench... Automotive Forums Survival Guide |
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#7
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
There were plants in Michigan,now shut down making Ethanol,too expensive.Plus it raises the price of Corn which is bad.The IRL uses Ethanol for race fuel.The fuel pumps for flex fuel vehicles are more money if one goes out.
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#8
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
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When I speak of vapor lock it is at high temperatures. Gasoline is more volatile than alcohol at low temps but the inverse is true at high temps. Low temps do inhibit the evaporation of alcohol and thats why I keep my Vodka chilled, but at high temps the addition of alcohol increase the vapor pressure in a fuel system. http://www.tpub.com/content/altfuels...8/47880142.htm As long as the engine and fuel pump are running, vapor lock can not occur. The problem came when shutting down the vehicle for a short period when hot and the ethanol vapor locked the fuel lines under the hood during the "heat soak". Nothing much to do but prop the hood open and wait. Happened a few times last summer. Quote:
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#9
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
How about if you turn the keyswitch on until the fuel pump quits running then turn it off then back on to get multiple fuel pump runs to maybe push the gasses out of the system before starting? It helps get mine started because of low pump pressure...I gotta replace that thing...lol
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#10
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
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#11
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
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When I sat through physics and chemistry classes, I was taught that heat is only a small fraction of the equation. When you dust off your old physics books and re-read the chapters on Boyle, Charles, and Dalton's laws, you might have a better grasp of the energy produced by the creation of more moles of resultant gasses with ethanol combustion than with gasoline combustion. Pressure by heat is only a fraction of that pressure. Being educated in Big Ten schools (two of them) there is little doubt that site was produced with the "assistance" of the liberal arts and journalism departments of a PAC 10 school. Before you try to defend them, remember that these are the same people who handed us the likes of Nancy Pelosi nd Harry Reid. 'Nuff said?
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Permanent seat assignment on the Group W bench... Automotive Forums Survival Guide |
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#12
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
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But compare that to the vapor pressure and boiling points for gasoline. The link you provided clearly shows the vapor pressures for pure fuels, but rather conveniently neglects to list the details for commonly available blended gasoline, which is what most of you are using. It has a vapor pressure almost 50% higher than ethanol. Get that data in your hands, then tell me which one will vaporize with lower input heat and impart more vapor pressure on the closed system. The universities of Iowa, Indiana, and Illinois have a lot more empirical data on ethanol fuels than Colorado, dating back to the mid-1970s. Colorado, despite their beautiful landscapes and friendly population, just doesn't have any history with grain ethanol.
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Permanent seat assignment on the Group W bench... Automotive Forums Survival Guide |
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#13
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
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If the pump is weak, there is not much else to be done other than to relieve pressure and hope the pump can push some liquid fuel through the line faster than it can explode into vapor in the hot lines. you can insulate/isolate the fuel lines with heat shielding if the problem becomes more than a periodic nuisance. Strange that you would experience this with ethanol, but at 100ºF, I have no such problems on any vehicle, including the potentially worst offender, a CPI system in a van, where all the heat is contains in one, compact area.
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Permanent seat assignment on the Group W bench... Automotive Forums Survival Guide |
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#14
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
So, to get back to my original question... Are there any options for a vehicle running on E10 that shouldn't be?
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#15
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Re: Lets discuss Ethanol
Just remembering some things...alky "burns" cool. The alky dragsters & funny cars do long burnouts, back up slow, take a long time to stage then jump on the throttle, slipping clutches while holding a death grip on the brakes trying to build up extra heat before launching. You don't hear of them torching pistons either.
Alky, like many other liquids, boil at lower temperatures as atmospheric pressure decreases...like on a Colorado mountain. It could be "fizzing" the gasoline. The late great Smokey Yunick built a motor for the Pike's Peak race with instructions not to fire the engine until you got to the race area...that mill musta had some real compression. Now this may have an impact on the O2 sensor too since it's a thermocouple and needs a good deal of heat to generate the millivolt signal which the computer uses to determine injector squirt. |
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