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Hey again, Wow, I really don't have a clue about averaging the octane ratings. It seems like it makes sense, so that's what I went with. This is just a big learning experience for me. That is something I will definitely look more into. You touched on something interesting though... 02... E85 is an oxygen rich fuel. Think of gasoline fortified with ethanol, like E10. They call it "oxygenated fuel". It's supposed to be better for the environment, right? The upside to being rich in oxygen is a more complete burn, virtually no carbon build up, and much fewer toxic gasses coming out the tailpipe. As far as quicker burn, I'd say you're probably right, but the high octane rating raises the flashpoint at which the fuel ignites, not really slowing the burn down just keeping it from predetonating.
After freshening up yesterday on my reading, it seems that E85 is normally in the 105-106 octane range. Not the 106-108 like I had said before. I agree that you are mechanically limited on your incoming air which in turn affects the amount of fuel you can use too. If your fuel is oxygen rich, it makes sense to think that while you can only intake a certain amount of air, you also get the liquid oxygen contained in the fuel. Thus resulting in better burn rates. Now I don't know these things to be fact, it's just what I'm putting together in my head while trying to figure this stuff out.
There are several good things to read about v8 drag racers using E85. Every well known carb company now makes E85 carbs. You can also retrofit gasoline carbs with E85 metering blocks, jets, etc... Fuel injection is even easier. It's interesting that these guys aren't reporting any real gains in performance. Once they get their engine tuned correctly for E85, they post the same numbers(or very similar) as when using race gas.
So there's no real performance gains to speak of... That's a bummer, but there are still plenty of benefits to using E85. I know you asked about upper end lubrication. Some guys report using about 2oz. of Marvel Mystery oil per 5 gallons of E85. That may be a good idea, but the E85 experts claim that it's not needed. Going from some studies that others have done, They claim that an engine running only E85 looks much much better when tore down. There is no carbon build-up anywhere. The pistons, cylinders, combustion chambers, valves, everything is clean. One study, (the suburban w/ 106k of E85 miles) showed cross hatching on the cylinder walls still intact after 106k miles. That's pretty impressive, and kinda dismisses the lubrication questions. Again though, I can't state these examples as fact. I know it's shocking, but you can't always trust what you see on the internet.
Then there's the cost benefit, the need to be less dependant on foreign oil, the cleaner burning and less poluting, and the pride of buying and helping the american economy. For every gallon of E85 I buy, I know that at least 85% of it came from an american farmer. That alone is worth it to me.
Ok man, good stuff! I'll continue to study on this. Anyone else have any experience with the stuff?
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