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The Inconvenient Truth About Ethanol

921 messages, Last post on Oct 07, 2009 at 10:53 AM
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Ethanol is not as great as it is cracked up to be. Read this. You will also understand why there are so many Chewy Ethanol ads. http://www.caranddriver.com/features/11174/tech-stuff-ethanol-promises.html |
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Replying to: chewym (Jun 22, 2006 5:59 pm) That is a good article with lots of facts to ponder. |
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| It really is a good article. I think that it is funny how the E85 milage is not on the window stickers. I smell some lawsuits. | |
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I was wondering instead of having a E85 mix of ethanol and gasoline that, if it is possible to use 15 percent fuel as hydrogen peroxide mixed with 85 percent ethanol. I know that these two combinations are soluble, but i wonder how the combustion would be like. If anybody knows something of these mix, please feel free to answer them or if you guys have an opinion on it feel free to answer any way.
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Replying to: lurge_taxa (Aug 05, 2006 11:00 am) Advantages: Lots of energy in the fuel Concerns: 1. Is it too much energy for the engine to handle and will there be storage stability problems? 2. Cost. H2O2 is generally made using hydrogen and then distilled if a high purity material (doesn't contain water) is needed. What is the cost per gallon? 3. Corrosivity/reactivity of the peroxide with the fuel tank/lines/engine |
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I have notice a 2-3 MPG drop in mileage since the gas stations forced to change to Ethanol. YMMV, MidCow |
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Replying to: midnightcowboy (Aug 07, 2006 12:46 pm) If you are used to 30MPG's, it would be easy to have a drop of 1MPG under IDEAL conditions, 2MPG would certainly not be atypical. My congresswoman still thinks this E85 stuff represents "salvation." I want this to be true -- it just isn't so. However, with diesel we could stop importing from SA -- IF, 30% of the cars were diesel powered and equivalent "power" and cost of their gas engined counterparts. The BMW 3 series diesel if imported to the US and if it were priced at a $1,200 premium over the 330i gas version would pay for itself in a bit over 35,000 miles and from then on would start to have a TCO that would be lower for the diesel than for the gas version. Performance (acceleration), in this example, between the gas and diesel versions are very close due to the diesel's weapons grade torque. The mileage however exceeds a 40% improvement. Check out the review in the new C&D. Audi, too, produces some of the best diesels in the world -- with Audi, BMW and Mercedes engineering muscle and perhaps a diesel/electric hybrid, we would really make some progress in energy independence. The effect, too, would be lower greehouse gasses and we could buy time to perfect either newer and/or different and better technologies or improve our ability to get at the world's largest oil reserves (800 billion bbls.) that just happen to be in Colorado, et al. The talk on the T and V this week is "$4" gasoline. What's it gonna take $5/gallon to work on a mature and ever improving technology and put it under the hoods of American's cars? Yeah, $5/gallon, sustained for months and months and months would probably "get our attention." At the momemnt Ethanol and E85 are simply false promises. Yet, even believing that, I also believe we need to work on creating fuel that we can renew and renew and renew. Bio-diesel made from soybeans makes more sense from a fuel standpoint, an economy standpoint and a FARMING and FOOD standpoint (something that seems to be ignored in all of this Ethanol noise.)
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Replying to: markcincinnati (Aug 09, 2006 6:46 am) BTW, what hasn't received much coverage is that the world's second largest oil field, Cantarell in Mexico, is entering a rather spectacular decline. Its production is down by around 7 to 8% from last year and the drop is expected to get steeper over the next year (that's the nature of these maximum contact horizontal wells). Mexico is our second biggest source of petroleum. And a further crimp on Mexican petroleum exports is that internal consumption is on the rise. So as an alternative for a renewable resource I'm going to suggest whale blubber. You can burn it, you can eat it, and it even makes a great skin moisturizer. |
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Replying to: chewym (Jun 22, 2006 5:59 pm)
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Replying to: gypsy_tech (Aug 15, 2006 10:06 am) The US government not only hands out $.51 per gallon to the producers. They guarantee the price of corn to the farmer. Plus the biggest gamble is they guarantee the loans on the ethanol plants. We were on the hook for the 90 ethanol plants that were dismantled during the last go around with ethanol. ADM has nothing to lose and millions to gain. We are paying the price with little or nothing to show for it. I can make a profit on anything if the government builds the factory and makes sure I get as much as I want for the product. Do you think I trust ethanol.org to give an accurate mileage on E10? NO!!!
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