End of ethanol?

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Personally I don't see E85 surviving without some help. Now adding it to regular gas will keep going until a certain point where it isn't profitable for the manufacturers.

I predict the demand and availability of E85 going way down, as for using it in regular gas mixes, that is only happening because of gov. regulations and will continue as long as such regulations are in place. The gas refiners are forced to blend ethanol regardless of price. Gov trumps economics and common sense every time. :(
 
All this damned corn use is making my Tortilla prices go up. Don't they make alcoholic beverages from corn as well?
 
I think it will spell the end of ethanol sooner or later....

For autos that's OK, but let's not outlaw ethanol completely - Maybe it will bring down the price of bourbon, whiskey, gin, vodka, etc. Not likely though, as most of the prices are due to taxes....
 
While the $0.45/gal blender tax credit and $0.54/gal import tariff expire Dec 31, ethanol use is by no means going away.

Ethanol use is mandated by the Renewable Fuel Standard legislation passed in 2007 under the last Administration. The RFS for corn-based ethanol rises to 13.2 bln gal in 2012 from 12.6 bln in 2011. There are separate mandates for cellulosic ethanol and other so-called advanced fuels. At roughly 5 billion bushels of corn (1 bu of corn makes 2.75 gal of ethanol) ethanol is now the largest end use for corn accounting for 40% of the demand for the 2011 US corn crop. Gasoline blenders are required to show that they consume corn-based ethanol equal to 10% of their annual volume of gasoline produced.


Ugh.

BMF, I am happy you are able to make it work but I am with Chip. I hate being forced to have in the 10 or 15% mixes.
 
It will stick around, if only for people like BMF. Many tuners see it as a better fuel than C16. The available was it's most appealing factor to me. That was the main reason I asked my tuner to look into making my GT run on E85. The only race fuel my tuner wanted to explore outside of E85 is VP Import (pricing is not near as attractive to me and it's leaded).
 
How compatible is the stock fuel system with E85? I know that the fuel pumps and injectors will not flow enough of the stuff, but are there any other issues?
 
I think Ford's stance is that the stock system is not compatible with any ethanol. There is always the question of corrosion unless a system is designed with ethanol in mind but even in 2005 the designers had to know states like Texas and especially California were doing blends at every pump. Sense many of us have been using a fuel with 10-15% ethanol sense 2005 and no one has reported any issues with a breakdown in the lines or grommets I would assume it's not a huge factor. I still would not let E85 sit in my tank, uncirculated, for more than 2 or 3 weeks.
 
I think Ford's stance is that the stock system is not compatible with any ethanol. There is always the question of corrosion unless a system is designed with ethanol in mind but even in 2005 the designers had to know states like Texas and especially California were doing blends at every pump. Sense many of us have been using a fuel with 10-15% ethanol sense 2005 and no one has reported any issues with a breakdown in the lines or grommets I would assume it's not a huge factor. I still would not let E85 sit in my tank, uncirculated, for more than 2 or 3 weeks.

I would think knowing that the Feds and states mandated the use of ethanol that most cars built in 2005 or earlier are compatible with 10% ethanot, but not 85%.
 
One would think (or at least this one would think) that any % of ethanol would require that the parts be able to cope with the corrosive properties of the substance. Especially sense the designers expected many of these cars to sit for long periods of times. I have changed everything on my fuel system to an ethanol resistant parts, except the tank.
 
One would think (or at least this one would think) that any % of ethanol would require that the parts be able to cope with the corrosive properties of the substance. Especially sense the designers expected many of these cars to sit for long periods of times. I have changed everything on my fuel system to an ethanol resistant parts, except the tank.

Some material are resistant to chemicals at low concentration, but will degrade at higher concentrations.


Here is a website with some materials and what they are resistant to.

http://www.coleparmer.com/Chemical-Resistance
 
marvel mystery oil is a fuel lubricator that should be used with E85 etc as it will keep your seals, etc from drying out. i use it with the 100 octane LL avgas i run in my whipplecharged BIG Block Chevy boat motor....
 
How compatible is the stock fuel system with E85? I know that the fuel pumps and injectors will not flow enough of the stuff, but are there any other issues?

you will destroy a stock GT fuel system if you run E85 through it with or without marvel mystery oil....

the car manufacturer states which fuel systems are compatible with E85 and the GT is not.

E85 is essentially 85% methanol which is essentialy alcohol. it runs very dry and very cool and is oxygenated and makes more power than pump gas but you have to run more gallons per minute of it to maintain proper a/f ratios....

straight 100 alcohol/methanol makes more power than 120 octane race gas but you burn way more gallons of it per minute. it runs so cool that this is the reason that dragsters do not need radiators and the water jackets in their blocks are filled solid....
 
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Some material are resistant to chemicals at low concentration, but will degrade at higher concentrations.


Here is a website with some materials and what they are resistant to.

http://www.coleparmer.com/Chemical-Resistance
Good reference, thanks for the link. I've been messing with it for 30 minutes.

marvel mystery oil is a fuel lubricator that should be used with E85 etc as it will keep your seals, etc from drying out. i use it with the 100 octane LL avgas i run in my whipplecharged BIG Block Chevy boat motor....
I have heard of this stuff and have been told to add it to fuel and oil on some old hot rods. I question it's effectiveness as a fuel additive. I've always been told that oil is a knock enhancer.

you will destroy a stock GT fuel system if you run E85 through it with or without marvel mystery oil....

the car manufacturer states which fuel systems are compatible with E85 and the GT is not.

E85 is essentially 85% methanol which is essentialy alcohol. it runs very dry and very cool and is oxygenated and makes more power than pump gas but you have to run more gallons per minute of it to maintain proper a/f ratios....

straight 100 alcohol/methanol makes more power than 120 octane race gas but you burn way more gallons of it per minute. it runs so cool that this is the reason that dragsters do not need radiators and the water jackets in their blocks are filled solid....
Both E85 and then E100 both contain less power, as Chip stated. Consequently you have to add 30-40% more full to have the same amount of energy. The extra liquid basically becomes a coolant. Methanol has better cooling properties than ethanol but that is not the reason they dumped the cooling system. The dumped the cooling system because this was such a short burn and the fuel didn't heat up as much as petrol (but it certainly didn't cool anything down).
 
I'm not a chemist, but i have a relatively fast drag car. In the simplest of terms, alcohol runs much cooler but you have to dump alot more of it into the cylinders because it is less thermally effecient. It is highly corrosive, and if you don't drain your fuel system after each event, you may not be running the next event when you unload your car. You will probably be dumping your oil alot more often(I know about the ring tech) because it is cloudy(polite wording). You can absolutely make more power with E85 than pump premium because it has a higher octane. The government has mandated a certian amount of alt. fuel consumption, which is why so much ethanol is being produced before yearend. Producers getting ahead of the curve. It will be very interesting to see the political manuvering in the first half of next year concerning the govt. mandates. BTW, govt. mandates that are untouchable is like a debt ceiling that cannot be raised.

Steve
 
One would think (or at least this one would think) that any % of ethanol would require that the parts be able to cope with the corrosive properties of the substance. Especially sense the designers expected many of these cars to sit for long periods of times. I have changed everything on my fuel system to an ethanol resistant parts, except the tank.

Mark,

At a concentration of 10% the corrosive properties of Ethanol are mostly (but not totally) canceled out by the anti-corrosive properties of gasoline. All cars made after 2001 should be able to handle E-10 which is the only gas available here in Arizona along with a bunch of other states. E-15 and higher start to cause problems in cars that are not built to handle E-85.

Chip
 
Hi gentlemen,

Hope all had a great holiday… I was asked to comment on this thread.

E85 is 85% Ethanol… not methanol. E10 is 10% Ethanol. I believe everyone here knows that, but I wanted to clarify since I saw that methanol was listed in a post in the thread.

It is a good thing that the subsidies are ending... it's retarded to produce a fuel that cost more to produce then it sells for. The good news is that sugar cane produced ethanol takes about 7 times less energy consumption to produce ethanol than corn does. Perhaps this is where they are trying to steer it?

MTBE is an oxygenator that used to be in pump gasoline fuels. Now it is mostly used in race gasoline fuels. The EPA starting finding it in our ground water; this required a replacement oxygenator to be found. Enter Ethanol. It increases the oxygen content of the fuel for emissions. It is far safer for the environment than MTBE. It is more corrosive as everyone has mentioned, though far less corrosive than methanol. Pump E85 has additives that help reduce its corrosion effects.

As stated, the GT fuel tank is not compatible with higher percentages of Ethanol... this said, I don't believe there is a huge issue with pump gasoline with E10 mixes. Are you better off with E0 gasoline for your Ford GT?… sure, but that’s not practical for most of us. I have spoken several times with the lead engineer that oversaw the design of the Ford GT fuel tank... this began when we started designing the mechanical fuel system for the Ford GTs. I had to make sure I knew and understood all that was going on inside the stock tank. The tank itself is compatible, the stainless rib structure inside is, however, some of the vent valves and filler neck float valves are not. Ethanol compatibility was not specified as criteria by Ford when the fuel tank company designed and produced the tanks for the GT.

That said, we are on the tail end of producing a replacement tank for the Ford GT that is 100% compatible with ethanol, methanol, or pump gasoline. It increases the fuel capacity by over 5gal. We laser scanned the stock tank and the fuel tank tunnel in the car. Then CAD designed the tank from this information. It was designed to work with multi-fuel in conjunction with our flex fuel sensor that integrates with a MoTeC system... essentially making the GT a true Flex-Fuel vehicle. Its primary goal was to work with our mechanical fuel system like what is on Mark's GT but doesn't have to be tied to a mechanical pump. Its first integration will be with a customer's GT in Houston and will be completed sometime in the next month to month and a half.

The customer's desire and goal was to be able to run straight 100% methanol on the street. He has a 20k sqft private shop with a large car collection and a private crew that takes care of his vehicles... making M100 somewhat feasible. He calls, they prep the car, fuel it up, he arrives and drives off... brings it back, they clean it up, and store it away. 100% methanol limits your range as you can't fill up anywhere. If he switches the tune in the car to the Ethanol tune, then he can start at E100 at the shop and then if he starts to run low he can fill up at any gas station whether it's E85 or E10 or any mix in-between... the Ethanol sensor will pick up % of E in the fuel, feed it to the MoTeC, the MoTeC will make the changes to the tune on the fly and away he goes. For most customers, with regard to methanol, the new tank will allow them to run any mix of E on the street and then run 100% methanol at the track. Ethanol and Methanol do not readily mix.

We've had a similar customer that we did a street TT Ferrari F50 for… we installed an underground tank and a filling station in his garage for E100. Works great… the Flex Fuel sensor technology today improves on this for those interested in performance.

Placing "Targets" on the GT tunnel
DSC01086.jpg


Laser Scanning the GT tunnel
DSC01041.jpg


Laser Scanning the Stock GT Tank
DSC01154.jpg


Here is the tank with the laser scan tunnel and other car components around it.
tankandtunnelassembly.jpg


Another view
tankandtunnelassembly2.jpg


Stock tank and new tank merged for ccomparison
tankandtunnelassembly3.jpg


New Tank
tank-masterassembly1.jpg



For those with any vehicle switching to E85, Be aware that high percentage ethanol or methanol fuels require a different oil to prevent oil sludge. The SAE oil specifications can be found online. Oil temperature is also important as this promotes "boiling off" any fuel contamination in the oil.

All in all, Ethanol is a better performance fuel than gasoline and Methanol is even better. Does fuel economy suffer? Yes. As many stated, E100 is a 60%+ increase in consumption under power and M100 can be 100%+ increase in consumption under power on boosted engines. Lower percentages of E will obviously have less consumption increase. Most do not run alch fuels rich enough under power… the increased oxygen content widens the “tuning window” allowing the engine to be run significantly richer without inducing rich misfire. Remember, the performance increase is from the oxygen increase and the cooling effects… richer fuel mixtures increases oxygen and more cooling allowing other things that produce power to be increased… like compression, boost, timing, etc. Capabilities of fuels for performance applications in order are Methanol, Ethanol, Race Gasoline, Pump Gasoline.

Can an E85 car be run leaner than a factory tune to recover some of this loss in fuel millage do to consumption increase? Sure, but understand that emissions is the leading target in factory tunes. Leaning out a mixture will almost always increase NOX. Don’t care about emissions?... then you’re fine. However, don't underestimate the ability of the major manufactures, especially Ford... they have some of the best research labs, calibrators, and calibration strategies in the industry. Their tunes are built with high precision for their goal at hand. This is why their tunes are the way they are; they won’t leave increased economy “on the table”. If a tune modification results in an increase in fuel economy, but leads to an emission failure, they won’t do it. This is why there might be room for our definition of “improvement” over a factory tune… It’s nice that those of us with other goals in mind are able to modify the tunes for different results. On this note: Increasing the fuel economy for ethanol, by leaning target lambda values out, to increase public demand of E is a moot point. The major manufactures can’t do it due to emissions with current technology.

If you are looking for performance though you cannot beat alcohol based fuels... they are heavily oxygenated which supports producing power and also have high vaporization characteristics that promote cooling which moves the detonation threshold higher. For example: A car on methanol will typically run 20 degrees cooler than one on gasoline. My methanol race engines that run 14:1 compression and 50+ psi boost, produce 800F exhaust temps. A gaoline mixture in these einges would probably produce over 1600F exhaust temps. The biggest thing to keep in mind is that engines have a thermal limit... reach that temperature limit and they start to come apart from either detonation or metal transfer. It's all about controlling temperatures. On this note: The reason methanol and nitro drag vehicles don't run water is because engine failures, of water cooled engines, typically lead to putting water down on the track and possibly under the tires. It's a safety issue. It is not because it is better to run without water or that methanol or nitro cool the motor equally as well as having "wet" engines. The engines would produce higher hp numbers with better cooling.

I know it’s a long post… and that the new tank is somewhat off subject of the first post, though it pertains to the fuel at hand and GT compatibility. Hopefully you guys find my post interesting and that it positively adds to the thread.

Cheers
 
MoTec Magic - thanks 4 the info :thumbsup when it comes time for me to upgrade my fuel system for whatever reason i now know who to call :cheers i assume you guys do nitrous installations too for use with race gas?
 
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I know it’s a long post… and that the new tank is somewhat off subject of the first post, though it pertains to the fuel at hand and GT compatibility. Hopefully you guys find my post interesting and that it positively adds to the thread.

Cheers


Very interesting. Thank you for taking the time.
 
Will there will be a test on this later? Thanks for the info Fish.
 
Hi gentlemen,


As stated, the GT fuel tank is not compatible with higher percentages of Ethanol... this said, I don't believe there is a huge issue with pump gasoline with E10 mixes. Are you better off with E0 gasoline for your Ford GT?… sure, but that’s not practical for most of us. I have spoken several times with the lead engineer that oversaw the design of the Ford GT fuel tank... this began when we started designing the mechanical fuel system for the Ford GTs. I had to make sure I knew and understood all that was going on inside the stock tank. The tank itself is compatible, the stainless rib structure inside is, however, some of the vent valves and filler neck float valves are not. Ethanol compatibility was not specified as criteria by Ford when the fuel tank company designed and produced the tanks for the GT.


Cheers

Shawn this is a typical engineers response, for one it was never tested as the GT was never designed for E85, so there for they could NOT RECOMMEND that from an engineering stand point, so of coarse the engineer would tell you that. There are hundreds of vehicles types that never were never designed to use E85 and it works fine with NO problems. The 15% of gas is more than enough of lubricant, you don't need to add an Marvel Mystery oil. E85 is NOT Alcohol. You burn a steel/copper head gasket with alcohol and you burn and melt the head (I MEAN CRATERS DEEP WORTH OF MELTING BOTH STEEL AND ALUM HEADS AND BLOCKS) You will not do this on e85 or E98.

Well i guess i'll be the test mule. LOL I have had e85 in my gas tank for just about a year already and never drained it once. And freddy Not a single person I know has ever used marvel mystery oil in a E85 vehicle. Like I said NOT one tuner in the country has done more E85 conversions than Andy Wicks of Dynotune Usa in Watertown Sd. Over 3500 vehicles. I will also say that no one has made more combined power with it than he has. Millions of dollars worth of engines in every make and model of cars that you can imagine and NOT 1 failure from it. 1820rwhp on E85. So much Bs with this fuel its funny....