Ethanol conversion?

Makes a lot of sense. Suppose I invent a fuel that gets you 200 mpg,
but it costs $200 per gallon. Would you go for it? No. MPG isn't the
object; it's MPD: miles per dollar.

On E60 (on my way to E85) I get 15% less mpg, but it costs 25% less.
That means I am getting 13% more miles/dollar than on gasoline. The
calculation is (1-0.15)/(1-0.25) = 0.85/0.75 = 1.13.

Not to mention that with ethanol I pollute less, I cause less money to
flow to bad people, and I enjoy driving more, because I get higher
torque and higher horsepower. My old 1999 OB goes 0 - 60 mph in under
12.5 seconds.

Ben
And if I drive a little puddlejumper that gets 65MPG on low octane
pump gas, I run cheaper than you per mile, AND pollute less.
 
Uncle said:
Not to mention that with ethanol I pollute less, I cause less money to
flow to bad people, and I enjoy driving more, because I get higher
torque and higher horsepower. My old 1999 OB goes 0 - 60 mph in under
12.5 seconds.

Hi,

Well, I guess all that's left is to gather around the campfire and all
sing "Kumbaya!"

You pollute less? What were the emissions test results before the switch
and what were they after? Were the emissions tested for "new" polluting
compounds that could result from the burning of ethanol vs. gasoline?

You cause less money to flow to bad people? Who ARE these bad people?

You get higher torque and higher horsepower? What were the figures on
both before the switch, and what are they afterward?

You get a 0-60 time under 12.5 seconds? What was the time before the
switch? What was the car rated for when it was new?

What's that funny feeling in my shorts? Surely it's not someone trying
to blow greenhouse gases up me bum?

Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?

Rick
 
Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?

Rick

Rick, I don't have all those numbers. I, like you, approach these
matters with a "show me" attitude. Even if I had the numbers, you
should not be persuaded by them. It is characteristic of this
wonderful medium we are using that you shouldn't trust anybody. You
have no way of knowing that I am not a teen-aged boy making all this
up for the pleasure of fooling you.

Actually, I am very old, a retired physics professor who is worried
about the world my grandchildren will live in. We are not running out
of oil, but we are running out of cheap oil. When gasoline goes to
$15 per gallon, we won't be driving around very much unless we have an
alternative to gasoline. You won't be getting food at your supermarket
trucked all the way across the country. You may have to move out into
the coutryside to live near a farmer who will sell you part of his
crop. Our world is going to change drastically. The population of
the US and the world is likely to shrink.

So that is why I am interested in the potential of biofuels to
mitigate the disaster that awaits us. I cannot persuade you to use
ethanol. I am not that powerful. What I can do is to point you to
sources you may trust slightly that will make you willing to try some
things for yourself. You will be the best witness to their truth.

First, google "ethanol Brazil" and read their 30-year history.
Brazil is requiring gas stations to provide ethanol/gasoline at 24%
concentration even for unmodified cars. There are many flex-fuel cars
there that can burn E85. Brazil produces ethanol from sugar cane at
about 83 cents per gallon. (We could too, someday.) Sugar cane is a
much better feedstock than corn.

Next, google "E85 Albany NY". You will see a list of gas stations in
the state that sell E85. Notice that there are several sources that
an ordinary person cannot buy from; "no public access". That is
because the state of NY has fleets of vehicles that run on E85 and
they use these depots to keep them running.

Then look online for the acronym NYSERDA, which stands for NYS Energy
Research and Development Agency, and you will find, if you look hard
enough, that NYS will subsidize you, the gas station owner, with many
thousands of dollars to install an E85 pump.

I understand that Minnesota has gone much farther than NY to push for
ethanol use, but NY is where I live and what I know more about.

There are some states that have no E85 stations. If your state has
none, you may not be able to do the experiment I am going to
describe. It is what I did. I'm glad I did.

If your car is no longer under warranty, you may be bold enough to try
putting a little E85 into its tank. My experiment found that a
concentration of 40% (E40) is too much; my check-engine light came
on after 70 miles. I wasn't worried, because I had seen on YouTube a
breakdown (by a college lab) of an engine that had run 102,000 miles
on straight E85 without any conversion attempt, and it was fine.
(Alcohol burns cooler than gasoline, so the threat of engine burnout
because of fuel leanness was reduced.)

I just added a few gallons of E10 to reduce the concentration to E29.
Within a few miles, the light went out.

You don't have to do this with a full tank, as I did. If you are more
cautious, you can try with a smaller amount, as long as you can
estimate how much gasoline is in your tank when you add the E85.

I was surprised at how peppy my car seemed to be. It is an old car --
1999 Outback -- but it seemed to be young again and eager to run. I
wish I had measured its 0-60 time before, but it was too late. Maybe
somone else has a 1999 OB with 150,000 miles on it, well maintained,
and will do this measwurement. Otherwise, I'll do it some day. It is
not trivial to change fuels, because you always have some of the old
fuel left in the tank diluting what you put in.

I didn't expect the improvement in performance, or I would have made
the "before" measurements.

Since then I have learned (and you can verify online) that E85 has an
octane rating of 104 -- a fuel with higher octane than premium but
costing less than regular. If you search around a bit, you will find
other people who report an improvement in performance. In fact, 100%
methanol is a racing fuel. But even in my old car, the ECU is smart
enough to advance the timing a lot so as to take advantage of the
higher octane.

You will get lower mpg's, but if the price of E85 is like what I am
paying -- 25% less than regular -- you will likely be getting more
miles per dollar. We are still in the early days of E85.

Now I have converted my car to flex-fuel with a little box that
streches the pulse to the fuel injectors. I am up to E60 now, and the
next fill will take me close enough to call it E85. (See
Change2E85.com. Their converter is now EPA approved, they say. Their
customer service is excellent.) The conversion is reversible, so if I
buy a new car, I will move the converter to it.



This post is long enough now. If you are as motivated as I am to
solve the liquid fuel problem we are facing, you will take a chance,
try my experiment, and draw your own conclusions. You are your best
persuader.

Uncle Ben
 
I'll have to ask.

It's a 928 from 1979. I haven't actually measured its 0-60 time, so I
should not have made the hasty claim. But it sure snaps my head back
when you floor it.

Ben
 
Rick said:
Uncle Ben wrote:




Hi,

Well, I guess all that's left is to gather around the campfire and all
sing "Kumbaya!"

You pollute less? What were the emissions test results before the switch
and what were they after? Were the emissions tested for "new" polluting
compounds that could result from the burning of ethanol vs. gasoline?

You cause less money to flow to bad people? Who ARE these bad people?

You get higher torque and higher horsepower? What were the figures on
both before the switch, and what are they afterward?

You get a 0-60 time under 12.5 seconds? What was the time before the
switch? What was the car rated for when it was new?

What's that funny feeling in my shorts? Surely it's not someone trying
to blow greenhouse gases up me bum?

Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?

Rick

I seem to recall formaldehyde being a 'new' pollutant from alcohol? Not
sure anyone knows what that will do, unless the Brazilians have some data.
Even IF ethanol is not hugely water intensive to make. IF it has no
transportation issues, IF it's 'really' cheaper to produce, etc. It
should not require a subsidy from ME to provide experimental fuel to
someone else. Let it compete (btw - if there are subsidies for fossil
fuels, I'm equally opposed to those) in the open market. I'm just not
convinced. Ethanol has only about 65% the BTU per volume as gasoline it
CAN NOT be as 'efficient'. Either range or mileage MUST suffer. For the
same reason diesel has better mileage than gas - more BTU/volume.

No question it can be made to work, and perhaps cellulosic production
will alleviate the food/fuel problem as well as some of the production
costs and water usage issues. IT STILL will only be a stop gap measure
unless combined as a hybrid (or???) with a technology capable of
regenerative braking(compressed air, hydraulic
accumulators,electricity). Of those technologies, it's hard to imagine
our great grandchildren NOT using electricity as the prime mover for
personal autos.

Carl
 
...
It [ethanol}
should not require a subsidy from ME to provide experimental fuel to
someone else. Let it compete.

In general, Carl, I agree. But there is a chicken and egg problem
here. Why offer E85 for sale if there are so few FFV's out there?
And why buy an FFV if there are so few places to buy E85. The
Brazilian solution to this problem in the 1970-1980 period was
dictatorial: require stations to offer ethanol. Today they are
energy independent.

That would never fly here. In New York State, they offer a subsidy to
stations to install E85 pumps. So here in the Capital District (pop.
1 million +) there are four stations offering E85 and one more "coming
soon." In some states there are none at all.
Ethanol has only about 65% the BTU per volume as gasoline it
CAN NOT be as 'efficient'. Either range or mileage MUST suffer. For the
same reason diesel has better mileage than gas - more BTU/volume.

True if you only count miles per gallon as your measure. I get 15%
less mpg than on gasoline. But since E85 sells for 25% less than
gasoline, I am ahead on miles per dollar: 13% ahead, if you calculate
it correctly.

E85 also has an octane rating of 104 -- higher than premium, cheaper
than regular. When cars are designed to exploit this, the fuel
penalty will be greatly reduced. In turbocharged cars it already is.
I find my converted E85 car (1999 OB) runs well and has better
acceleration than on gasoline. (Probably from advanced timing.) I
enjoy driving it.

In Brazil they make ethanol for $0.83 per gallon. Sugar cane is a
much better feedstock than corn. Corn has starch, and you have to
convert starch to sugar before you ferment it; sugar cane has sugar to
start with. And you can burn the remaining stalks and leaves to
generate electricity. Brazil is doing it.
IT STILL will only be a stop gap measure
unless combined as a hybrid (or???) with a technology capable of
regenerative braking(compressed air, hydraulic
accumulators,electricity). Of those technologies, it's hard to imagine
our great grandchildren NOT using electricity as the prime mover for
personal autos.

A hybrid running on E85 would be very cheap to run. Let's hope the
batteries can be further improved. And we have to build nuclear
reactors for the electricity.

If we don't solve this oil problem soon, there is a disaster coming.
Oil is never going to get consistently cheaper. New discoveries can
push back doomsday, but it cannot be pushed back forever.

Today, oil is up to $134+ per barrel.

Ben
 
The
Brazilian solution to this problem in the 1970-1980 period was
dictatorial: require stations to offer ethanol. Today they are
energy independent.

That would never fly here. In New York State, they offer a subsidy to
stations to install E85 pumps. So here in the Capital District (pop.
1 million +) there are four stations offering E85 and one more "coming
soon." In some states there are none at all.

Brazil also has a large supply of *waste* sugar cane.

We in the US make ethanol from valuable food products.

Personally, I think the answer is to eliminate oil power whenever
possible, making it available for uses where it truly is the best
fuel.

For instance, use as much nuclear power as possible to generate
electricity, replacing expensive oil and dirty coal, use as much
nuclear generated electric power in public transit, plug-in electric
cars, home heating and cooling, etc... and divert the natural gas
currently being used to generate electricity to motor vehicle and
heating uses.

The other energy suppliers, like wind, tidal, solar, hydroelectric.
etc... should also be used whenever practical.

That leaves oil for use in places where absolutely necessary, and corn
as food.
 
....
Brazil also has a large supply of *waste* sugar cane.

And make ethanol out of it for $0.83 per gallon
.....
Personally, I think the answer is to eliminate oil power whenever
possible, making it available for uses where it truly is the best
fuel.  

Right on.

Ben
 
If only WE had a waste product like that... 8^)

With a cellulose conversion process we could use fall leaves, straw,
cornstalks, waste paper,sawdust, forestry waste, the grass cut from
the sides of roadways, and all manner of other "waste" along with
non-food crops like sawgrass.
 
With a cellulose conversion process we could use fall leaves, straw,
cornstalks, waste paper,sawdust, forestry waste, the grass cut from
the sides of roadways, and all manner of other "waste" along with
non-food crops like sawgrass.

That would be awesome!
 
That would be awesome!

Lobby your representatives to encourage them to put money towards
perfecting this technology instead of subsidizing corn sourced
ethanol.

If Bush and his pirates had put HALF what they are spending on the
"war for oil" in Iraq into this research, we would not NEED middle
east oil. The Arabs would hate us less, and the rest of the world
would not be facing punishingly high food-grain prices (which also
translates to high meat prices, bread prices, etc - not to mention the
high transport and fertilizer prices caused by the speculation in the
oil market.
 
With a cellulose conversion process we could use fall leaves, straw,
cornstalks, waste paper,sawdust, forestry waste, the grass cut from
the sides of roadways, and all manner of other "waste" along with
non-food crops like sawgrass.

Hi,

I agree w/ the concept...

However, in all these proposals we have a HUGE problem, called
"politics." And before we jump on the bandwagon of condemning all
politicians as evil or anything else that may be the popular "cause du
jour," let's look at the definition of the word politics as given me by
a poli sci professor many, many years ago: "Politics is the interaction
that occurs whenever TWO or more people get together to discuss an
issue." Notice when the process STARTS? At only TWO people. What we see
at the statehouse level is the end of the line, not the beginning.

Ok, let's apply that locally to the conversion process Clare proposes.
It's been tried... what happened?

Here in SoCal we have huge expanses of desert. Most of it is barely
habitable without imported water, imported electricity, etc., etc. In
other words, any "development" is an artificial environment created on a
basis of being supported externally. Quite a bit of that land is Indian
reservation land. Those of you familiar w/ the institution of Indian
reservations in the US may key in on the fact that means the US
government itself viewed that land as the worst of the worst when they
gave it to the Indians.

The Indians have turned the tables in some areas by building and running
casinos. These bring in BIG bucks. But the people who can look past
their noses realize the casinos operate essentially at the pleasure of
the governmental agencies that COULD take away the right to operate them
at any time, and have started to put some of those big bucks into other
"on reservation" ventures to make the tribes self-sustaining. I mention
"on reservation" as that's an important player in cutting thru certain
kinds of red tape.

One of them locally is a bio-mass electric generating station. SoCal
generates HUGE quantities of green waste--agricultural, commercial AND
personal--and disposal of it has become problematic as the population
has exploded. A solution was developed to help use some of it by
building this station. Using state of the art technologies, the green
waste is dried, pulverized into tiny bits and fed into a burner that
works similar to an oxygen-blast oven in a steel mill, the exhaust is
"scrubbed" so it's very clean, and the heat created is used to produce
steam to drive the electric generators.

Sounds like a win-win, doesn't it? Well, not so fast--let's get back to
the good professor and those TWO people. The plant had barely gone
online when the lawyers got into the picture. Seems a couple of the
non-Indian locals (remember where this plant is: pictures of the local
"settlements" are hardly disimilar to pictures of villages in Iraq. To
say these people live in a "hole" would be polite) started to complain
about the "smell" from the green waste as it was piled up to dry prior
to being processed (on their own, or "coached" by outside interests?
We'll probably never know for sure.) Then some environmentalist types
started to complain of the extra truck traffic bringing that waste in.
And on and on: it looked like a cash cow to someone if they just
complained loudly enough.

I don't know how these problems were resolved. I do know the plant is
still in operation, a fact I'd venture to guess is most likely because
it's on Indian res land and the "whiners" don't have the resources to
fight this at a federal level, but if it were on anything but
"protected" land, I'd predict it would NOT still be operating, IF it had
even been built in the first place.

Until we come to grips w/ the fact that everything that "looks good" up
front also has some "not so pretty" side effects at the other end, I
can't see us coming up w/ the solutions we need in the quantity we need.
I've mentioned population controls as being part of that solution. Part
of the reason I say that is simply because of the scale we're dealing
with. But the main reason is no matter HOW cute the baby looks, it STILL
produces dirty diapers!

In other words, there's no "have your cake and eat it, too" in the
solutions we're going to need... we go back to that pesky "Law of
Conservation of Matter" thing I woke up long enough to hear in that long
ago class and what do we find out? Mother Nature will NOT be bested!

Rick
 
Hi,

Well, I guess all that's left is to gather around the campfire and all
sing "Kumbaya!"

You pollute less? What were the emissions test results before the switch
and what were they after? Were the emissions tested for "new" polluting
compounds that could result from the burning of ethanol vs. gasoline?

You cause less money to flow to bad people? Who ARE these bad people?

You get higher torque and higher horsepower? What were the figures on
both before the switch, and what are they afterward?

You get a 0-60 time under 12.5 seconds? What was the time before the
switch? What was the car rated for when it was new?

What's that funny feeling in my shorts? Surely it's not someone trying
to blow greenhouse gases up me bum?

Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?

Rick

Finally there are some numbers to report -- not from me, an ordinary
motorist without a lab, but from a major car company. Saab has
produced some interesting flex-fuel cars:

http://www.saabbiopower.co.uk/saabBiopower/

They report that on E85, torque increases 16% and horsepower increases
20%, compared to gasoline. A sporty model, the Aero X, runs on pure
100% ethanol clocks 0-62 mph (that's 0-100 km/hr, the common metric
measure) of 4.9 seconds. Top speed is quoted at 155 mph.

These cars are not yet available in the US, I understand, but physics
and chemistry are international.
 
Uncle Ben said:
Finally there are some numbers to report -- not from me, an ordinary
motorist without a lab, but from a major car company. Saab has
produced some interesting flex-fuel cars:

http://www.saabbiopower.co.uk/saabBiopower/

They report that on E85, torque increases 16% and horsepower increases
20%, compared to gasoline. A sporty model, the Aero X, runs on pure
100% ethanol clocks 0-62 mph (that's 0-100 km/hr, the common metric
measure) of 4.9 seconds. Top speed is quoted at 155 mph.

These cars are not yet available in the US, I understand, but physics
and chemistry are international.

I suppose I am glad to hear somebody is putting some engineering effort
toward ethanol (but I will never buy a Saab, ever, even if they weren't so
ugly), I think (in the sense that good science is good), but my Subaru was
not designed to burn Ethanol and according to my records I keep, not only
are miles per gallon down, miles per dollar are down too, so I ask, where
are the savings and what benefits do I or the environment receive from
ethanol when it is forcing my vehicle to burn more fuel to get the same
amount of work done at a higher monetary cost? There are no stations where
I live or commute selling anything more than the mandatory E10 which I
really wish would just go away. I don't see the cost savings of ethanol, if
there really are any, being passed to the consumers here in Oregon but I'm
open to being shown them if anybody can.

Uncle Ben, I would enjoy to see about a year's worth of spreadsheet data
from the time you installed your conversion kit. It's only too bad you
didn't gather it from before as well. And then perhaps a few years from now
to know how well the car is holding up as far as drivability issues, etc,
that could directly be related to your ethanol use. I drive for a living so
if somebody, anybody could finally show me positive data for ethanol in my
Subaru that wasn't designed for it, I'm all ears, since for the time being I
don't see how I can avoid it.

~Brian
 
I suppose I am glad to hear somebody is putting some engineering effort
toward ethanol (but I will never buy a Saab, ever, even if they weren't so
ugly), I think (in the sense that good science is good), but my Subaru was
not designed to burn Ethanol and according to my records I keep, not only
are miles per gallon down, miles per dollar are down too, so I ask, where
are the savings and what benefits do I or the environment receive from
ethanol when it is forcing my vehicle to burn more fuel to get the same
amount of work done at a higher monetary cost?  There are no stations where
I live or commute selling anything more than the mandatory E10 which I
really wish would just go away.  I don't see the cost savings of ethanol, if
there really are any, being passed to the consumers here in Oregon but I'm
open to being shown them if anybody can.

Uncle Ben, I would enjoy to see about a year's worth of spreadsheet data
from the time you installed your conversion kit.  It's only too bad you
didn't gather it from before as well.  And then perhaps a few years fromnow
to know how well the car is holding up as far as drivability issues, etc,
that could directly be related to your ethanol use.  I drive for a living so
if somebody, anybody could finally show me positive data for ethanol in my
Subaru that wasn't designed for it, I'm all ears, since for the time beingI
don't see how I can avoid it.

~Brian- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Thank you, Brian for a reasoned approach to our mutual problem of
driving economics.

Some of your statements suggest that you are referring to E10. I had
the same reaction you did and spent time looking around for E0 (no
ethanol).

I am not talking about E10. I think that E10 gives benefit to the
environment, but no benefit to the driver. In my 1999 OBW I first
mixed E85 and E10 at the pump to give an estimated E30. That gave me
some savings AND improved accelaration. I ran that for a few weeks,
and everything seemed fine.

Oregon is not being a leader in providing E85. On www.e85.com you can
see how many stations there are by city. I count 1 in Eugene, 4 in
Portland, and a scatering of others around the state. But if you live
in Portland, the average discount for E85 from gasoline is about 20%.
That should compensate you for a considerable reduction in mpg.

Can I assume that your car is younger than 1990 and that it has a
control system compliant with OBDII? If so, your milage reduction
with E30 or higher should be in the range of 5 to 15%. That will give
you a clear savings in mpd.

The benefit to the environment is well documented. There is one study
that was trumpeted in the newspapers saying that running E85 will
increase smog. But if you read that paper, that result was reached
for LA but not Atlanta, and the reason LA suffered is because when
smog is already high, NOx emissions actually keep it from going
higher, and the ethanol cars had TOO LOW emissions of NOx.

In New York State, the E85 price discount is over 26%, so it is better
for me.

To go beyond E30, I had to install a converter, and over the weeks of
filling and refilling with E85, I am now up to almost straight E85. I
love how the car responds.

You should take courage from the people of Brazil who have been
running E15 in unmodified cars for decades or so and have recently
moved up to E24. Cars made since 1985 or so in the US have been
required to tolerate E10. So manufacturers improved the elastomers
and gas tank metals. The results work even with much higher
concentrations according to many who have converted old cars. There
is a video of the guts of a 2002 car which ran 105,000 miles on E85
without any conversion. It looked clean and undamaged. (Surely its
CEL was lit up all the way. The mixture was quite lean, but it did
not hurt the car.)

Since I started these experiments and changes only last month, it will
be a while before I have a year's experience to show you. But there
are people who have been doing this long before me.

Realize that there are strong forces working to prevent adoption of
E85, and there is much misinformation on the net about corrosion and
other damage. After all, as they say, "turkeys don't vote for
Thanksgiving." Exxon/Mobil seems to be an exception. Two of my 4
sources of E85 in Albany are Mobil stations.

It is wise to be cautious with an expensive machine like your car.
Check out www.change2E85.com for more information. That is who I have
been dealing with. The converter I bought there has been approved by
the EPA, but California is being more cautious..

If there is more I can tell you, just ask.

Ben
 
I suppose I am glad to hear somebody is putting some engineering effort
toward ethanol (but I will never buy a Saab, ever, even if they weren't so
ugly), I think (in the sense that good science is good), but my Subaru was
not designed to burn Ethanol and according to my records I keep, not only
are miles per gallon down, miles per dollar are down too, so I ask, where
are the savings and what benefits do I or the environment receive from
ethanol when it is forcing my vehicle to burn more fuel to get the same
amount of work done at a higher monetary cost?  There are no stations where
I live or commute selling anything more than the mandatory E10 which I
really wish would just go away.  I don't see the cost savings of ethanol, if
there really are any, being passed to the consumers here in Oregon but I'm
open to being shown them if anybody can.

Uncle Ben, I would enjoy to see about a year's worth of spreadsheet data
from the time you installed your conversion kit.  It's only too bad you
didn't gather it from before as well.  And then perhaps a few years fromnow
to know how well the car is holding up as far as drivability issues, etc,
that could directly be related to your ethanol use.  I drive for a living so
if somebody, anybody could finally show me positive data for ethanol in my
Subaru that wasn't designed for it, I'm all ears, since for the time beingI
don't see how I can avoid it.

~Brian- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Thank you, Brian for a reasoned approach to our mutual problem of
driving economics.

Some of your statements suggest that you are referring to E10. I had
the same reaction you did and spent time looking around for E0 (no
ethanol) until I tried some experiments.

I am not talking about E10. I think that E10 gives benefit to the
environment, but no obvious benefit to the driver. In my 1999 OBW I
first
mixed E85 and E10 at the pump to give an estimated E30. That gave me
some savings AND improved accelaration. I ran that for a few weeks,
and everything seemed fine.


Oregon is not being a leader in providing E85. On www.e85prices.com
you can
see how many stations there are by city. I count 1 in Eugene, 4 in
Portland, and a scatering of others around the state. But if you
live
in Portland, the average discount for E85 from gasoline is about 20%.
That should compensate you for a considerable reduction in mpg.


Can I assume that your car is younger than 1990 and that it has a
control system compliant with OBDII? If so, your milage reduction
with E30 or higher should be in the range of 5 to 15%. That will
give
you a clear savings in mpd.

The benefit to the environment is well documented. There is one
study
that was trumpeted in the newspapers saying that running E85 will
increase smog. But if you read that paper, that result was reached
for LA but not Atlanta, and the reason LA suffered is because when
smog is already high, NOx emissions actually keep it from going
higher, and the ethanol cars had TOO LOW emissions of NOx.

In New York State, the E85 price discount is over 26%, so it is
better
for me.

To go beyond E30, I had to install a converter, and over the weeks of
filling and refilling with E85, I am now up to almost straight E85.
I
love how the car responds.


You should take courage from the people of Brazil who have been
running E15 in unmodified cars for decades or so and have recently
moved up to E24. Cars made since 1985 or so in the US have been
required to tolerate E10. So manufacturers improved the elastomers
and gas tank metals. The results work even with much higher
concentrations according to many who have converted old cars. There
is a video of the guts of a 2002 car which ran 105,000 miles on E85
without any conversion. It looked clean and undamaged. (Surely its
CEL was lit up all the way. The mixture was quite lean, but it did
not hurt the car.)


Since I started these experiments and changes only last month, it
will
be a while before I have a year's experience to show you. But there
are people who have been doing this long before me.


Realize that there are strong forces working to prevent adoption of
E85, and there is much misinformation on the net about corrosion and
other damage. After all, as they say, "turkeys don't vote for
Thanksgiving." Exxon/Mobil seems to be an exception. Two of my 4
sources of E85 in Albany are Mobil stations.


It is wise to be cautious with an expensive machine like your car.
Check out www.change2E85.com for more information. That is who I
have
been dealing with. The converter I bought there has been approved by
the EPA, but California is being more cautious..


If there is more I can tell you, just ask.


Ben
 

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