iboughtatahoe23
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2023
- Posts
- 1,023
- Reaction score
- 527
I’ve always used e85 on my 2014. I read it can wear out the fuel system components. But I save a lot of money with e85 I feel like it’s $2 a gallon in my area.
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
Fake news. It keeps the system cleaner.I’ve always used e85 on my 2014. I read it can wear out the fuel system components. But I save a lot of money with e85 I feel like it’s $2 a gallon in my area.
Pre-2000 vehicles with fuel systems built prior to ethanol in gasoline might've had that problem.I’ve always used e85 on my 2014. I read it can wear out the fuel system components.
fueleconomy.gov's opinion:I save a lot of money with e85 I feel like it’s $2 a gallon in my area.
If E85 costs at least 15% less than gasoline in your area (where is that?),fueleconomy.gov said:E85 (Flex Fuel)
E85 contains 51% to 83% ethanol, depending on geography and season.
Summer blends tend to have more ethanol, while winter blends have less.4
MPG.
Due to ethanol's lower energy content, FFVs operating on E85 get roughly 15% to 27% fewer miles per gallon than when operating on regular gasoline,
depending on the ethanol content. Regular gasoline typically contains about 10% ethanol.5
Although I'm a pessimist, and do not expect to see any of the following, I'll be happy to be proven wrong:There are other reasons to run E85 that exclude the cost, like cleaning the injectors,
and that the motors love what is essentially cheap race gas.
Mine makes about 10 horsepower more on E85 compared with 93 but also runs smoother, cooler, etc.
I've done similar data collection and analysis with my Yukon XL since 2017 including oil analysis.Although I'm a pessimist, and do not expect to see any of the following, I'll be happy to be proven wrong:
*Lifetime comparison of two otherwise identical engines' lives,
one operating on pure petrol / E0/G100 gasoline, one operating on E51-E83
but these days the more likely comparison would be E10/G90 gasoline vs E51-E83
Comparison would focus on 3 things:
Highway MpG vs metro/urban/city/ stop'n'go MpG
Used motor oil analysis every oil change, which should happen every 4000 miles
Engine teardown after at least 200,000 miles, or when engine fails
Anyone who says the above is not going to happen, won't surprise me.
If they look for it I guess. They've never asked or said anything about it.@swathdiver, IFF you were to use either gasoline or e85 for an entire oil change duration,
do you think you'd be able to lie to your motor oil analyst -
say you used e85 when you actually used gasoline, or vice versa -
and get away with it? Or do you think your oil analyst would detect the difference?
Motor oil is diluted by whatever fuel sneaks past the piston rings -
and some small amount of fuel ALWAYS manages to do so.
Theory: the more ethanol the engine burns, the more often oil should be changed ... ?
(Can catch can users tell the difference between using gasoline vs using e85?)
Didn't say it's a problem, it's just a fact.If they look for it I guess. They've never asked or said anything about it.
As you can see from my oil analysis, there isn't much fuel in the oil.
Gas gets hot and evaporates, not sure why you would think it's a problem, or E85 instead of gasoline.
My truck has burned about two thousand gallons of E85 since 2017 what kind of damage am I supposed to have?