Micahsd
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I was just curious if anyone has regularly put E15 gas in their gas tank and what their experience was? I know the manual says it's fine up to E15 or 15% Ethonol. I've got the 5.3L engine which doesn't require premium gas.
I live in Iowa and the E10 (87 octane) is discounted as an incentive to promote ethanol. The local station has E15 (88 octane) discounted a little further about at around.15 cents cheaper than the regular E10. There currently isn't a big enough cost difference for me to change to E15 all the time, but if there's a large enough difference at all in the future I might consider it.
What I've filled up all my vehicles with for the past 15-20 years is the E10 (87 octane) or whatever the cheapest option is. I'd skip the ethonol entirely, although that's significantly more costly as premium (91 octane) is the only non-ethonol option and that's usually $1-1.50 more expensive. The only time I use Premium is for my lawnmower since it doesn't have Ethonol or back when I had a Corvette which required it (even though sometimes I out the regular E10 in it without any issues).
Back when I had a 2007 Tahoe, it was FlexFuel and could handle E85 (85% ethonol) and the cost per gallon was a lot cheaper back then. I did experiment with running that at that time and my end result was worse gas mileage (in the end the cost difference per gallon made the cheaper option a wash with the regular E10 option). I'd suspect comparing E10 to E15 that I'd probably see the same thing with slightly less gas mileage, but if the price were a lot cheaper maybe it would be worth it???
I hope to not get a debate started on here whether ethonol is good or bad for engines...pretty sure it's not the best thing, but the vehicle is supposedly designed to handle it. Thanks for checking out the post.
I live in Iowa and the E10 (87 octane) is discounted as an incentive to promote ethanol. The local station has E15 (88 octane) discounted a little further about at around.15 cents cheaper than the regular E10. There currently isn't a big enough cost difference for me to change to E15 all the time, but if there's a large enough difference at all in the future I might consider it.
What I've filled up all my vehicles with for the past 15-20 years is the E10 (87 octane) or whatever the cheapest option is. I'd skip the ethonol entirely, although that's significantly more costly as premium (91 octane) is the only non-ethonol option and that's usually $1-1.50 more expensive. The only time I use Premium is for my lawnmower since it doesn't have Ethonol or back when I had a Corvette which required it (even though sometimes I out the regular E10 in it without any issues).
Back when I had a 2007 Tahoe, it was FlexFuel and could handle E85 (85% ethonol) and the cost per gallon was a lot cheaper back then. I did experiment with running that at that time and my end result was worse gas mileage (in the end the cost difference per gallon made the cheaper option a wash with the regular E10 option). I'd suspect comparing E10 to E15 that I'd probably see the same thing with slightly less gas mileage, but if the price were a lot cheaper maybe it would be worth it???
I hope to not get a debate started on here whether ethonol is good or bad for engines...pretty sure it's not the best thing, but the vehicle is supposedly designed to handle it. Thanks for checking out the post.