Jun-11-2018 08:58 AM
Jun-18-2018 11:47 PM
Jun-18-2018 07:36 AM
jkwilson wrote:Lynnmor wrote:jkwilson wrote:
Don’t forget the 27% HP drop. That’s the bigger deal with that truck.
I understand that some are getting more horsepower with E85, but I have no hard evidence. What you are missing is that way more fuel is injected, off-setting any power loss. The amount of power loss or gain would be determined by how the engine was factory "tuned."
No way to get more horespower out of E85 than E10. Physical impossibility unless the engine has been tuned to dump E10 straight into the exhaust to reduce fuel economy.
But at maximum power, the engine will produce 27% less HP on E85 than on E10 because there simply isn't as much energy in E85.
Jun-18-2018 05:23 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
Did you know that many race cars use alcohol?
Depends which kind of race car ! NASCAR cars use E15, but it is special racing fuel and it is over 100 octane.
Indy cars use methanol. Very different animal. It makes a lot of power but requires a lot of fuel.
Jun-17-2018 09:40 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
Did you know that many race cars use alcohol?
Jun-12-2018 04:24 PM
Jun-12-2018 01:00 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
Again, MORE fuel is injected, thus the power is still maintained. Did you know that many race cars use alcohol? Because ethanol is an oxygenated fuel, it can run at a richer mixture.
Jun-12-2018 07:51 AM
jkwilson wrote:
No way to get more horespower out of E85 than E10. Physical impossibility unless the engine has been tuned to dump E10 straight into the exhaust to reduce fuel economy.
But at maximum power, the engine will produce 27% less HP on E85 than on E10 because there simply isn't as much energy in E85.
Jun-12-2018 07:50 AM
Wikipedia wrote:
2-valve 4.6 L, 5.4 L, and 6.8 L engines found in many 1997-2008 Ford, Lincoln, and Mercury vehicles may have aluminum cylinder heads with threads for spark plugs that are stripped, missing, or otherwise insufficiently bored out.
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3-valve 5.4 L and 6.8 L engines built before 10/9/07 and 3-valve 4.6 Ls built before 11/30/07 found in many 2004–2008 Ford, Lincoln, and Mercury vehicles have an issue with difficult-to-remove spark plugs, which can cause part of the spark plug to become seized in the cylinder head.
Jun-12-2018 06:34 AM
Lynnmor wrote:jkwilson wrote:
Don’t forget the 27% HP drop. That’s the bigger deal with that truck.
I understand that some are getting more horsepower with E85, but I have no hard evidence. What you are missing is that way more fuel is injected, off-setting any power loss. The amount of power loss or gain would be determined by how the engine was factory "tuned."
Jun-12-2018 06:33 AM
Jun-12-2018 05:55 AM
Jun-12-2018 05:51 AM
jkwilson wrote:
Don’t forget the 27% HP drop. That’s the bigger deal with that truck.
Jun-12-2018 05:32 AM
Jun-12-2018 04:35 AM