jroberts650
New member
Sorry but this is BS. I have been through the fuel systems on a number of vehicles that have run nothing but E10 fuel for hundreds of thousands of miles. Squeaky clean. ALL fuel systems in the last many years have been designed for it. The only real problems have been in older engines with fuel systems containing materials not compatible. E10 gas containing ethanol does NOT turn to corn syrup. Dont wish to debate the fallacy of using it in the first place, but its not a detriment to modern engines longevity.
If a vehicle burns the ethanol fuel within a certain amount of time, your exactly correct that it won't turn back to sugar. But, let that fuel stay in a tank for an extended amount of time, untreated, and look at the damage it causes. My father is a mechanic, day in and day out. He has worked on cars that have sat for an extended amount of time, both carb and fuel injected. Injectors will crystalize at the injector nozzle and even crystalize in the lifters and seize them. I've seen it personally several times.
Yes newer vehicles will burn it, without problem. Just don't let them sit any long period of time. Ethanol attracts water, only takes 30 days to seperate from the fuel and will settle in the bottom of the tank. Then the pump sucks water first into the fuel system. Do what you want, I don;t want that in any of my vehicles that aren't driven consistently. For me, the ethanol free is cheap insurance or I'm using a stabilizer.