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  4. E85 fuel...is it a good thing???

E85 fuel...is it a good thing???

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  • torbsT Offline
    torbsT Offline
    torbs
    wrote on last edited by
    #6

    yeah, i understand the principle of having to run a lot more fuel, but what about a potential of more power?...is it there?...im not saying i would use this fuel daily or anything, but it'd be a great alternative to methanol on street legal days to save some $ IF it were to work...

    Current vehicles: 90 Civic Hatch, 95 Civic Sedan, 93 Del Sol, 95 Civic Coupe, 99 Integra GS
    Past vehicles: 78 Malibu 2dr., 88 Riviera, 90 Laser RS-T, 91 Audi 90 quattro, 93 Del Sol, 90 TSI AWD, 92 Integra GSR, 94 Del Sol, 93 Prelude Si, 97 Civic Coupe, 88 Toyota MR2 Supercharged, 94 Lexus GS300, 89 CRX, 06 Vento Zip, 90 Civic hatch, 98 Honda Civic, 99 Honda Civic, 92 Yamaha XJ600S, 87 4WD Subaru GL, 94 Audi 90CS Quattro, 00 Civic EX Coupe, 04 Dodge SRT-4, 89 Corolla GTS (Silvertop), 95 Del Sol

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    • JimJ Offline
      JimJ Offline
      Jim
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      Just spend the money on real race gas... its not that big of a difference; if your worried about saving a dollar or two on gas, you shouldn't be racing.

      If you have to richen it up to run E85, you would be losing power....

      Just buy race gas and lean it out...

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      • torbsT Offline
        torbsT Offline
        torbs
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        true true...i was just curious if it would work, cuz it would be great if it did work, but it doesnt...o well...i guess i was just hopin that it was a miracle fuel or somthin...

        Current vehicles: 90 Civic Hatch, 95 Civic Sedan, 93 Del Sol, 95 Civic Coupe, 99 Integra GS
        Past vehicles: 78 Malibu 2dr., 88 Riviera, 90 Laser RS-T, 91 Audi 90 quattro, 93 Del Sol, 90 TSI AWD, 92 Integra GSR, 94 Del Sol, 93 Prelude Si, 97 Civic Coupe, 88 Toyota MR2 Supercharged, 94 Lexus GS300, 89 CRX, 06 Vento Zip, 90 Civic hatch, 98 Honda Civic, 99 Honda Civic, 92 Yamaha XJ600S, 87 4WD Subaru GL, 94 Audi 90CS Quattro, 00 Civic EX Coupe, 04 Dodge SRT-4, 89 Corolla GTS (Silvertop), 95 Del Sol

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        • harwood39H Offline
          harwood39H Offline
          harwood39
          wrote on last edited by
          #9

          i think it would be worth it for the street, if your car is set up for it. Just thinking that you would be able to run more boost and in turn make more power.

          Harwood Development - Emergency Vehicle Upfitter

          2730 5th Ave S. Unit C
          Fargo, ND 58103
          701-429-3686

          Rontan, D&R Electronics, Feniex, Federal Signal, SVP/Star, Bradford, Tufloc, Lund, Code3, Sound-Off, Nova, Copeland, Power-Arc, Recon

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          • JimJ Offline
            JimJ Offline
            Jim
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            Hmm... did you not read the posts previous to yours?

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            • SmitEvoS Offline
              SmitEvoS Offline
              SmitEvo
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              E 85 = sucks c16= kick ass

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              • O Offline
                O Offline
                out there
                wrote on last edited by
                #12

                if you have to burn more fuel, then you're going to spend more... so it would cost more to run e85. not to mention the cost of adding parts... trust me, i had this conversation with nick and kevin a while back

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                • P Offline
                  P Offline
                  PSI2HI
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #13

                  out there wrote:
                  if you have to burn more fuel, then you're going to spend more... so it would cost more to run e85. not to mention the cost of adding parts... trust me, i had this conversation with nick and kevin a while back

                  But you still had to try it didn't ya? Haha. Tell us how it worked out for ya.

                  "Just because you know it all doesn't mean you can do it all"

                  "If you can't afford to do it right the first time can you afford to do it a second time?"

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                  • S Offline
                    S Offline
                    seanjohn
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #14

                    Through a little more research I found out that the stoichiometric coefficient for ethanol about 9.0:1, meaning you'd have to burn almost 1.5 as much just to get the same amount of power. But, that would only be if you are burning 100% ethanol. If you ran 20% ethanol, 80% 91 octane you'd have an octane rating of almost 94 and need about a 12.4 to run correct air fuel. Seems like this wouldn't be to hard with a properly tuned car.

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                    • O Offline
                      O Offline
                      out there
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #15

                      it's not hard to run e85, it just takes more. to be more specific about the problems i had... normally i idle just fine at -30% with my afc, but i had to richen up to -22% to get the vacuum needle back into the proper place. when i did a couple of 3rd gear pulls, i had to richen the entire curve 3-7% (something like that) to maintain the same knock counts as with my 92octane settings. sure, with e85 you can get better octane and run more boost... but there are so many other factors that need to be considered.
                      also keep in mind, these numbers are at +/-19psi on the 14b

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                      • S Offline
                        S Offline
                        seanjohn
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #16

                        I really think a good tune with 20% E85 would be a good idea...guess I'll give it a shot!

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                        • P Offline
                          P Offline
                          PSI2HI
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #17

                          If you have to richen the car up there is no power to be gained.

                          "Just because you know it all doesn't mean you can do it all"

                          "If you can't afford to do it right the first time can you afford to do it a second time?"

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                          • torbsT Offline
                            torbsT Offline
                            torbs
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #18

                            well...now that the idea of e85 working isnt true, im wondering if this stuff called xylene and tylene (sp?) work. a lot of ppl use it in dsmtuner as an octane booster...seems like they use it in a 10-15/85-90 mix with gas because xylene has an octane of 117 and tylene has an octane of 114...im not sure how much they cost around here exactly, but it would be great if you could make your own "home made" race gas, so you could run a little bit more on the street if you want, cuz we live in ND/MN and nobody seems to have over 92 octane at the pump around here (correct me if im wrong, cuz im not totally sure)...have any of you tried either of those to things?...later

                            Current vehicles: 90 Civic Hatch, 95 Civic Sedan, 93 Del Sol, 95 Civic Coupe, 99 Integra GS
                            Past vehicles: 78 Malibu 2dr., 88 Riviera, 90 Laser RS-T, 91 Audi 90 quattro, 93 Del Sol, 90 TSI AWD, 92 Integra GSR, 94 Del Sol, 93 Prelude Si, 97 Civic Coupe, 88 Toyota MR2 Supercharged, 94 Lexus GS300, 89 CRX, 06 Vento Zip, 90 Civic hatch, 98 Honda Civic, 99 Honda Civic, 92 Yamaha XJ600S, 87 4WD Subaru GL, 94 Audi 90CS Quattro, 00 Civic EX Coupe, 04 Dodge SRT-4, 89 Corolla GTS (Silvertop), 95 Del Sol

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                              Guest
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #19

                              I use Touelene (sp?) on the street. It reduces my knock

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                              • SmitEvoS Offline
                                SmitEvoS Offline
                                SmitEvo
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #20

                                cheaper to buy 110 octane 3.30 a gal

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                                • torbsT Offline
                                  torbsT Offline
                                  torbs
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #21

                                  where do you get 110 octane at?

                                  Current vehicles: 90 Civic Hatch, 95 Civic Sedan, 93 Del Sol, 95 Civic Coupe, 99 Integra GS
                                  Past vehicles: 78 Malibu 2dr., 88 Riviera, 90 Laser RS-T, 91 Audi 90 quattro, 93 Del Sol, 90 TSI AWD, 92 Integra GSR, 94 Del Sol, 93 Prelude Si, 97 Civic Coupe, 88 Toyota MR2 Supercharged, 94 Lexus GS300, 89 CRX, 06 Vento Zip, 90 Civic hatch, 98 Honda Civic, 99 Honda Civic, 92 Yamaha XJ600S, 87 4WD Subaru GL, 94 Audi 90CS Quattro, 00 Civic EX Coupe, 04 Dodge SRT-4, 89 Corolla GTS (Silvertop), 95 Del Sol

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                                    Guest
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #22

                                    the advantage of Tuolene is that it is unleaded so doesn't mess w/ my O2 sensors. Tuolene isn't too badly priced either if you buy it in larger quantities (Fargo Glass & Paint can get upto 55 gallon drums, I buy it by the 5 gallons..special order)

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                                    • O Offline
                                      O Offline
                                      out there
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #23

                                      xylene and toluene are available at any chemical supply or paint place, they're basically paint thinner. i personally like xylene because it's +/- $6/gal and, like chuck said, it's unleaded.
                                      if you're going to use xylene or toluene, use a higher %; something like 1gal to 3gal of 92octane, and then reset your ecu

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                                        Guest
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #24

                                        I like Toluene as it is found naturally in gasoline. In fact the F1 cars of the early-mid 80's used to run on 85% toluene back when they ran turbo 4 cylinders. Obviously we don't have F1 engines in our cars as noone is making 750 HP/liter, but at least we know it can be run in a gas engine as it is present in gas already.

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                                        • torbsT Offline
                                          torbsT Offline
                                          torbs
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #25

                                          how much is toluene by the 5 gallon?

                                          Current vehicles: 90 Civic Hatch, 95 Civic Sedan, 93 Del Sol, 95 Civic Coupe, 99 Integra GS
                                          Past vehicles: 78 Malibu 2dr., 88 Riviera, 90 Laser RS-T, 91 Audi 90 quattro, 93 Del Sol, 90 TSI AWD, 92 Integra GSR, 94 Del Sol, 93 Prelude Si, 97 Civic Coupe, 88 Toyota MR2 Supercharged, 94 Lexus GS300, 89 CRX, 06 Vento Zip, 90 Civic hatch, 98 Honda Civic, 99 Honda Civic, 92 Yamaha XJ600S, 87 4WD Subaru GL, 94 Audi 90CS Quattro, 00 Civic EX Coupe, 04 Dodge SRT-4, 89 Corolla GTS (Silvertop), 95 Del Sol

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