Jun-11-2018 08:58 AM
Jun-12-2018 03:43 AM
Jun-12-2018 03:01 AM
Jun-11-2018 09:25 PM
jkwilson wrote:
Don’t forget the 27% HP drop. That’s the bigger deal with that truck.
The only thing you need to get used to the fact that the gas engine needs turn a lot of RPM to generate horsepower. It takes a while to get used to it.
Jun-11-2018 06:24 PM
valhalla360 wrote:jkwilson wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
since I started watching and E85 is around 30% lower price, so even if I lose 10-15% on the MPG, I still come out ahead on the miles per dollar (calculated a 27% increase in miles per dollar at current local prices assuming a 10% loss in MPG).
You are seriously mistaken as to MPG loss. Closer to 20-30% and on the bad end when loaded. It exceeds the price difference.
E10 has 111,836 BTU/gallon while E85 has only 81,800 BTU/gallon. A 27% energy decrease in a gallon of fuel means 27% less power available unless the fuel consumption rate is increased by the same amount.
It almost always comes out costing more to run E85 and you have less available power available for towing.
At current local prices, I would still come out slightly ahead with a 27% MPG drop...but that was a minor side thing and if I got the truck, I could play with it to see the difference and then buy when priced low enough.
But E85 is really more of a side issue.
Jun-11-2018 05:43 PM
Jun-11-2018 04:57 PM
Jun-11-2018 03:39 PM
jkwilson wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
since I started watching and E85 is around 30% lower price, so even if I lose 10-15% on the MPG, I still come out ahead on the miles per dollar (calculated a 27% increase in miles per dollar at current local prices assuming a 10% loss in MPG).
You are seriously mistaken as to MPG loss. Closer to 20-30% and on the bad end when loaded. It exceeds the price difference.
E10 has 111,836 BTU/gallon while E85 has only 81,800 BTU/gallon. A 27% energy decrease in a gallon of fuel means 27% less power available unless the fuel consumption rate is increased by the same amount.
It almost always comes out costing more to run E85 and you have less available power available for towing.
Jun-11-2018 03:22 PM
2edgesword wrote:jkwilson wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
since I started watching and E85 is around 30% lower price, so even if I lose 10-15% on the MPG, I still come out ahead on the miles per dollar (calculated a 27% increase in miles per dollar at current local prices assuming a 10% loss in MPG).
You are seriously mistaken as to MPG loss. Closer to 20-30% and on the bad end when loaded. It exceeds the price difference.
E10 has 111,836 BTU/gallon while E85 has only 81,800 BTU/gallon. A 27% energy decrease in a gallon of fuel means 27% less power available unless the fuel consumption rate is increased by the same amount.
It almost always comes out costing more to run E85 and you have less available power available for towing.
It seems the actually mpg difference will vary...
"Due to ethanol's lower energy content, FFVs operating on E85 get roughly 15% to 27% fewer miles per gallon than when operating on regular gasoline, depending on the ethanol content. Regular gasoline typically contains about 10% ethanol."
In my area the cost of regular gas (87 octane) is $2.90 ~ $3.00 and E85 $1.90 ~ $2.00 so if the actually difference in energy content is somewhere midway between 15% ~ 27% E85 is more economical for me.
I have a 2012 F250 6.2L 3.73. I can't talk about the long term reliability of the truck (purchased it use three months ago with 86,000 mile on it) but it does tow my 8,000 pound trailer very well. On flat land at 60mph in sixth gear you're around ~1500rpm, on moderate grades 2500rpm and on the steepest grades I've encounter (Pennsylvania) 3500rpm.
Jun-11-2018 02:12 PM
Jun-11-2018 01:28 PM
Jun-11-2018 01:21 PM
jkwilson wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
since I started watching and E85 is around 30% lower price, so even if I lose 10-15% on the MPG, I still come out ahead on the miles per dollar (calculated a 27% increase in miles per dollar at current local prices assuming a 10% loss in MPG).
You are seriously mistaken as to MPG loss. Closer to 20-30% and on the bad end when loaded. It exceeds the price difference.
E10 has 111,836 BTU/gallon while E85 has only 81,800 BTU/gallon. A 27% energy decrease in a gallon of fuel means 27% less power available unless the fuel consumption rate is increased by the same amount.
It almost always comes out costing more to run E85 and you have less available power available for towing.
Jun-11-2018 12:53 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
since I started watching and E85 is around 30% lower price, so even if I lose 10-15% on the MPG, I still come out ahead on the miles per dollar (calculated a 27% increase in miles per dollar at current local prices assuming a 10% loss in MPG).
Jun-11-2018 12:21 PM
Jun-11-2018 12:11 PM