Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!
You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!
Just another of Hugo Chavez's ways to have some "fun" at our expense![]()
Just means that many more farmers are ploughing under their wheat to plant corn for ethanol, driving up the costs of wheat and even other corn-related products (corn syrup is in tons of foods)>
Isn't ethanol bad for your engine? thought I read that
Depends on the vehicle. If it is not a flex-fuel vehicle then yes it is
Depends on the vehicle. If it is not a flex-fuel vehicle then yes it is
I boycott CITGO, but that's as far as I'll go with that statement.
It's not 10%, either. Ethanol has 73% the energy density as gasoline, so with a 10% mix you're down around 3% in mileage. Your mileage may have gone down 10%, but ethanol can only be part of that.
That being said. Why cant they refine the oil to improve MPG. They should not only require car companies to improve the MPG but also the oil companies to improve the MPG in th gas distributed.
Or Part 4 of the trilogy, not be amenable to spark ignition systems. Diesel fuel has 15-20% higher energy density than gasoline, part of the reason it shows better mileage, but I don't see anyone putting that in their tank.That'd be great, except for the whole thermodynamics issue. Without adding something with a higher energy density than gasoline, you can't make gas more powerful. While I'm sure there are substances that would work, they'd most likely be A) noxious, 2) expensive Third, corrosive, or lastly, all of the above.
i have heard that ethanol can attract/cause moisture in your gas tank, not sure if its true. I thought in New York State fuel must contain a certain percentage ethanol, but I could be wrong on that?
Just means that many more farmers are ploughing under their wheat to plant corn for ethanol, driving up the costs of wheat and even other corn-related products (corn syrup is in tons of foods)>