Tune for Regular Gas

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.

RVAHokie

Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2022
Posts
78
Reaction score
40
Small engines can take more ethanol but most should use Ethanol free when available. Issue comes with engines that sit idle for long periods of time and that high ethanol fuel sits in the fuel lines. Eventually the fuel lines corrode away.

Happens all the time in small power tools (generators, mowers, lawn machines, as well as boats). Should always try to use ethanol free if you can find it.
 

swathdiver

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2017
Posts
19,582
Reaction score
26,270
Location
Treasure Coast, Florida
Small engines can take more ethanol but most should use Ethanol free when available. Issue comes with engines that sit idle for long periods of time and that high ethanol fuel sits in the fuel lines. Eventually the fuel lines corrode away.

Happens all the time in small power tools (generators, mowers, lawn machines, as well as boats). Should always try to use ethanol free if you can find it.
Doesn't happen in the aforementioned automobiles produced since 2001.

@mb1500 I have a challenge for you. Run three tanks of E15 if your engine doesn't require 91+ and note the gas mileage, then three more on E10 and post up the results.
 

mb1500

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 22, 2019
Posts
330
Reaction score
309
Doesn't happen in the aforementioned automobiles produced since 2001.

@mb1500 I have a challenge for you. Run three tanks of E15 if your engine doesn't require 91+ and note the gas mileage, then three more on E10 and post up the results.

Sorry, don’t have E15 around here.

If we assume everyone’s 2001 and newer PCM can properly adjust based on O2 feedback than the figure is roughly 1.65% more fuel consumption going from E10 to E15.

Too many factors driving in the real world for anyone to make a meaningful comparison but here’s the point.
Our 4 week average in the US for 06/03/22 was 9 million barrels per day. Change the national supply to E15 from E10 overnight, hold real demand constant, and that number goes to 9.1485, an increase of 148,000 barrels per day for nothing.
 

m1949

LS364/450
Joined
Nov 12, 2021
Posts
400
Reaction score
543
Location
MS Gulf
With these soaring gas prices is GM willing to provide a tune for regular gas vs premium on 6.2L models?!? Let's go GM, hook us up!!
I plan to try Ristone Octane booster. At $2.56 a bottle per 20gal, adding it to regular gas is considerably less expensive than 20 gals of premium.
 

m1949

LS364/450
Joined
Nov 12, 2021
Posts
400
Reaction score
543
Location
MS Gulf
AltI plan to try octane booster. The second best selling booster on Amazon sells for $2.56 to treat 20 gals of gas. If it meeets the makers claims I will save several dollars per tank full Given the difference in price per gallon between regular and premium gas.
 

DarkHorizon

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 9, 2022
Posts
29
Reaction score
12
If that octane booster works as good as advertised it will only boost you from midgrade to premium, not regular to premium. Around here that is about 20 cents a gallon so i'm not sure its worth the trouble/risk to save like $30 a year.
 

swathdiver

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2017
Posts
19,582
Reaction score
26,270
Location
Treasure Coast, Florida
Sorry, don’t have E15 around here.

If we assume everyone’s 2001 and newer PCM can properly adjust based on O2 feedback than the figure is roughly 1.65% more fuel consumption going from E10 to E15.

Too many factors driving in the real world for anyone to make a meaningful comparison but here’s the point.
Our 4 week average in the US for 06/03/22 was 9 million barrels per day. Change the national supply to E15 from E10 overnight, hold real demand constant, and that number goes to 9.1485, an increase of 148,000 barrels per day for nothing.
I have made a meaningful comparison, over the course of 4 years and documented it.

Not just the PCM, the fuel systems since 2001 are also made to handle E15. I am also not in favor of it being forced on the populace it should stand or fail on its own.
 

BMPNUGLS

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2015
Posts
224
Reaction score
102
Location
Mid-MO
The real problem with E10-E15 is it absorbs water - in particular if the vehicle sits for any length of time and temperature varies.

Being highly hygroscopic, ethanol will enable whatever fuel it's blended with to absorb more water. Water in fuel is rarely a good thing, and causes a number of problems for the equipment that uses that fuel. One big problem is a tendency that is called phase separation, which relates to the fact that an E10 or E15 ethanol blend can only absorb so much water.


If the ethanol fuel absorbs ulls too much water, phase separation occurs - the ethanol comes out of solution with the gasoline. Essentially, the mixture breaks apart. When this happens, it destroys the quality of that gasoline and strips away a good amount of the octane rating of that fuel. You end up with poor quality gasoline and a layer of water and gasoline in the bottom of your fuel tank that can damage your engine if it’s sucked up into the combustion chamber by your fuel line.
 

Banks22

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 28, 2021
Posts
839
Reaction score
510
Location
Michigan
The real problem with E10-E15 is it absorbs water - in particular if the vehicle sits for any length of time and temperature varies.

Being highly hygroscopic, ethanol will enable whatever fuel it's blended with to absorb more water. Water in fuel is rarely a good thing, and causes a number of problems for the equipment that uses that fuel. One big problem is a tendency that is called phase separation, which relates to the fact that an E10 or E15 ethanol blend can only absorb so much water.


If the ethanol fuel absorbs ulls too much water, phase separation occurs - the ethanol comes out of solution with the gasoline. Essentially, the mixture breaks apart. When this happens, it destroys the quality of that gasoline and strips away a good amount of the octane rating of that fuel. You end up with poor quality gasoline and a layer of water and gasoline in the bottom of your fuel tank that can damage your engine if it’s sucked up into the combustion chamber by your fuel line.
Its as if they’re trying to destroy the ICE vehicles.....
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,307
Posts
1,865,724
Members
96,896
Latest member
grass209
Top