Supposedly looking at it's total picture the greennies claim E 15 to be worse not better. Also a lot of water is used in its total production. :gaah:
Read the latest where they want you deflating SUV tires of the "rich".
The last thing we need is more of it.
Never understood why we would take something that is a food source, for us and livestock, and pour it in a gas tank. From what I understand, ethanol is more of an oxidizer than a fuel; it makes gas burn better, not go farther. It is hard on engine parts; when it was first developed, valves had to be hardened, pistons anodized and most petroleum based gaskets and seals were affected and had to be replaced.
This morning on the local news an ISU professor referred to studies that indicate producing a gallon of ethanol could be 24% more detrimental to our environment than a gallon of gasoline. I agree and would ask any ethanol advocate: what about the millions of tons of water vapor pumped into the air by distillation and increased corn production (ya, corn gives off moisture as it grows), is that why we have deluges instead of rainfall? What about the tons of fertilizer dumped on fields, and the affect on streams, rivers and lakes from run-off. What about plowing under thousands of acres of ground and exposing it to wind erosion and the warming of the sun (think global warming)? What is the cost to the environment of exhaust from vehicles involved in moving product and distillation of corn? And we can make a lot ot ethanol from waste products instead (cellulosic ethanol).
Sorry for the rant, but, IMO, this is one of really senseless things this country does!
AMA has been lobbying DC to stop E15 but it doesn't appear that anyone is listening.
:chat:...From what I have read this stuff 'E15' really gives you lots of cleaner air. The downside is that it costs more to make then auto gas. Also the fuel mileage is pretty low.
So much to learn and the media 'knows' all the answers?
It started as a legitimate effort to address oil shortages at the time. But, it's now a fixture because of the farm lobby I think.
The problem isn't octane it is the presence of a greater concentration of ethanol in the fuel than the seals and internals of the fuel injection system in the Spyder is designed to handle without damage. All the octane boost in the world won't fix that problem. Don't know the answer to the question but do know that octane isn't the problem.
Here's a comment and link to the comment regarding fuel injected/carburetor operated engines.
E10 “eats up rubber fuel lines,” he said. “The carbs (carburetors) get gummed up when they’re sitting.” Newer machines that have fuel-injected engines have “no problems,” though.
https://www.ellsworthamerican.com/featured/ethanol-blends-cause-tremendous-damage-to-small-engines/
Add to that the destruction of the habitat in the Mississippi river and the Gulf from all the corn farm runoff. If they were actually interested in improving the environment instead of profit, they'd end all ethanol production now.