motionclone
Well-known member
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Equipment
L345DT with Lp mower, forks and grapple thumb, Bobcat 337 Midi Ex
Only one station within 130 miles of me carries E-free gas. It is 88 octane - but costs nearly $1 a gallon more than the regular (87 octane with 10% ethanol). I use it in all my small engines; the owner's manual for my new lawn mower specifically warns against using gas with ethanol in it.All E-free gas up my way is high octane, it will cause all kinds of issues in some equipment, due to Knock sensors protecting the motors. Power tools and all 2-strokes get it nothing else.
I know that Cam-am UTV's will not tend to start if running High octane fuel.
You will get 10% better mileage. So compare prices. The ethanol is nothing more than filler. In NH the price differential is too much to make it worth it. When I was in MD I preferred it. I do use it in my garden equip including saw.OK a station here says they have it , so yeah chainsaw will get it,, but Im wondering about the truck,, that proce is compatible with regular wonder how it would run in the Silverado?
Yes, …Your “old carbed blazer” will suffer decreased mpg using ethanol-gas …because it is not “optimized” as newer vehicles are for that fuel. It was designed for gasoline…not E-gas. As technology realigns itself for E-gas, that trend reverses.Fact, 10% ethanol kills the mileage in my old carbed blazer by 15%! How is ethanol better? 10% ethanol added makes me buy 15% more.
Ethanol has almost made any small engines disposable due to most people not knowing anything about engines or how to clean a carb jet, dramatically increasing waste to landfills, wasted replacement costs. I help people all the time by cleaning the corn syrup out of the carb and saving them from buying a new lawn mower, generator, or whatever.
Yeah, let's take a major international food source and add it to fuel so it can decrease mileage and drastically increase the cost of almost all meat. That sounds like a great plan.
I am a simple man, but I have yet to see the upside to ethanol.
No, of course not, LOL…. IN fact, “environmentalists” like to point out that burning corn-produced ethanol is net-zero carbon fuel…because the growing corn recovers the C02 from the atmosphere….and that burning fossil fuels Adds to the carbon burden by taking carbon from the deep earth and releasing it to atmosphere when we burn it. I say HORTH THIT on that!…because the same corn is indiscriminate and absorbs the carbon produced by the burning of fossil fuel…. the obvious answer is simply to EAT MORE CORN. LOLGoehorn are you a corn or ethanol lobbyist? lol
Sorry, but I have to disagree. My old carbed engines are no different than fuel injected when it comes to the amount of energy needed to rotate the crank. There is no magic happening in new engines that somehow work better with less energy. Ethanol has less energy! Nothing changes that. Pure gas has more energy, regardless of how the fuel gets in the combustion chamber. Of course fuel injection is more efficient than carbs, but lighter cars, lighter cranks, tighter piston rings, lower viscosity oils, etc, is how newer engines are more efficient. They would be even more efficient with pure gas. As far as I know, there is no technology that makes ethanol contain equal or more energy than pure gas.Yes, …Your “old carbed blazer” will suffer decreased mpg using ethanol-gas …because it is not “optimized” as newer vehicles are for that fuel. It was designed for gasoline…not E-gas. As technology realigns itself for E-gas, that trend reverses.
Well there is a difference between old carb and new computerized fuel injection in that the mixture ratio is near optimal at all times and all fuels since the fuel injection will be adjusted as required. The old carb will just continue with whatever it was setup to do.Sorry, but I have to disagree. My old carbed engines are no different than fuel injected when it comes to the amount of energy needed to rotate the crank. There is no magic happening in new engines that somehow work better with less energy. Ethanol has less energy! Nothing changes that. Pure gas has more energy, regardless of how the fuel gets in the combustion chamber. Of course fuel injection is more efficient than carbs, but lighter cars, lighter cranks, tighter piston rings, lower viscosity oils, etc, is how newer engines are more efficient. They would be even more efficient with pure gas. As far as I know, there is no technology that makes ethanol contain equal or more energy than pure gas.
I won't even get into the electric thing. I love my battery tools, but vehicles have a long, LONG way to go. Nevermind raping the planet for Lithium and all of the precious metals needed for electronics. But, yeah, "EV's are going to save the earth!" Let me know when we find those Lithium wells that we can pump up.
Just read the first statement, huh?Well there is a difference between old carb and new computerized fuel injection in that the mixture ratio is near optimal at all times and all fuels since the fuel injection will be adjusted as required. The old carb will just continue with whatever it was setup to do.
We don’t disagree with each other…. any engine, modern or older….if switched between pure gas and E10 will have a small loss of mpg on E10 compared to pure gas. My previous comment was only to point out modern engines are optimized for E10 and will suffer less than your “old carbed” engine.Sorry, but I have to disagree. My old carbed engines are no different than fuel injected when it comes to the amount of energy needed to rotate the crank. There is no magic happening in new engines that somehow work better with less energy. Ethanol has less energy! Nothing changes that. Pure gas has more energy, regardless of how the fuel gets in the combustion chamber. Of course fuel injection is more efficient than carbs, but lighter cars, lighter cranks, tighter piston rings, lower viscosity oils, etc, is how newer engines are more efficient. They would be even more efficient with pure gas. As far as I know, there is no technology that makes ethanol contain equal or more energy than pure gas.
I won't even get into the electric thing. I love my battery tools, but vehicles have a long, LONG way to go. Nevermind raping the planet for Lithium and all of the precious metals needed for electronics. But, yeah, "EV's are going to save the earth!" Let me know when we find those Lithium wells that we can pump up.
I just checked the "stations" around where I live, and they are not stations, but retail stores that sell gasoline in small containers up to 5-gallon cans. Last time I checked, the 5-gallon can was over $100 or $20 a gallon for VP gasoline.E-free gas is available all around here, but is more expensive. All small engines get it---leaf blower, chainsaw, etc. and the boat when I had one, but the car and truck get the ethanol stuff.
Pure-gas.org - ethanol-free gasoline in the U.S. and Canada
Pure-gas.org is the definitive web site listing stations that sell pure gasoline in the U.S. and Canada.www.pure-gas.org
Funny you mention that. Ducati had a massive recall because the fuel tanks in some bikes were ballooning. Not so much because of incompatibility with E10/E15, but because the saturated vapor pressure/ temperature of the food fuel is so different than gasoline. Essentially, when a bike is in direct sunlight or parked in a garage while hot, the E would flash off and build pressure faster than the venting system could relieve the pressure.Copied from a flying website, does explain why it is bad. Also E-85 will eat some plastic's that are used in an Car as I had to replace a fuel system in a customer car(was using E85 in a non E85 vehicle((it was cheaper to fill up))).