โJun-21-2015 06:29 PM
โSep-19-2018 12:11 PM
โSep-19-2018 07:59 AM
down home wrote:
Ethanol is pure crony capitalism. Payback to Big Ag contributors.
It is a net increase in use of resources and has caused billions of dollars in equipment damages There are lots that repeat the pr campaigning points, of the media attesting to its benefits, when science and honest reporting shows it is costing society and our pocket books big time, in all areas including most prominently food costs and avilability. Lots more corn and soybeans and a lot less in food crops and variety.
โSep-19-2018 07:08 AM
โSep-19-2018 03:26 AM
โJun-30-2015 06:20 PM
Phase separation does NOT require a particular temperature range or time frame. It is caused by exceeding the point at which the fuel blend (10% Ethanol) can no longer absorb any more water, but the ethanol can still absorb more water and it's available to be absorbed. When that threshold is surpassed the water-laden alcohol drops out of solution with the gasoline. At that point you no longer have 50 gallons of E10 in your tank, you have 45 gallons of E0 gasoline and 5 gallons of straight, albeit water-laden, Ethanol. When that hits your engine, the fertilizer hits the rotary air circulation device.
โJun-30-2015 05:09 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Happens all the time. People are mistaken or don't know the facts all the time. Take you for instance. You didn't know that phase separation was dependent on temperature until I showed you a link.
โJun-30-2015 11:51 AM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Happens all the time. People are mistaken or don't know the facts all the time.
โJun-30-2015 09:08 AM
JaxDad wrote:Grit dog wrote:gazingm42 wrote:
Yes it improving my mileage about 4 MPG. I jumped from 14 in the city to over 18.
Umm, no it didn't.
And unless you are storing the truck for a while, save your $ and don't bother with no E gas. It's not going to hurt anything in newer vehicles if used while fresh.
Same truck running 100% no E gas in AK, averaged 12-13 mpg commuting, sea level. In WA, similar commute, sea level, ethanol, avg 12-13 mpg.Rick Jay wrote:
On all of our vehicles, I've noticed about a 10% decrease in real world mpg.
When we first got the motorhome, it was averaging about high 7's to low 8's for mpg. Once the E10 became all we could get, that range dropped to high 6's to low 7's.
I know what the math numbers (and the government) say, but every one of my vehicles disagrees with those numbers. A 10% decrease is what I observe.
Sure wish we could get real gas again.
~Rick
So are you saying these two members are lying, or they just don't know what they're talking about?
If you read the results of folks responding to fuel economy polls, the largest group is saying they are losing +10% on E10.
โJun-30-2015 08:19 AM
โJun-30-2015 06:17 AM
"Suspicions that the industry is topping the tank with ethanol have arisen because of a dramatic surge of imports from the U.S., which rose 150 per cent last year to 1.1 billion litres, the equivalent of more than 10,000 rail tank cars."Wouldn't this be in relation to some other country than the US since it says "from the US"? Where are you getting this information?
โJun-30-2015 05:39 AM
westend wrote:
Are those folks polled in areas where Ethanol added gas has recently been introduced? Is E10 new to some areas of the US and Canada?
โJun-29-2015 04:56 AM
โJun-29-2015 04:40 AM
Grit dog wrote:gazingm42 wrote:
Yes it improving my mileage about 4 MPG. I jumped from 14 in the city to over 18.
Umm, no it didn't.
And unless you are storing the truck for a while, save your $ and don't bother with no E gas. It's not going to hurt anything in newer vehicles if used while fresh.
Same truck running 100% no E gas in AK, averaged 12-13 mpg commuting, sea level. In WA, similar commute, sea level, ethanol, avg 12-13 mpg.
Rick Jay wrote:
On all of our vehicles, I've noticed about a 10% decrease in real world mpg.
When we first got the motorhome, it was averaging about high 7's to low 8's for mpg. Once the E10 became all we could get, that range dropped to high 6's to low 7's.
I know what the math numbers (and the government) say, but every one of my vehicles disagrees with those numbers. A 10% decrease is what I observe.
Sure wish we could get real gas again.
~Rick
โJun-28-2015 11:11 PM
gazingm42 wrote:
Yes it improving my mileage about 4 MPG. I jumped from 14 in the city to over 18.