V
Valued Corporate #120,345 Employee (B A R R Y)
Congratulations! My GF's Porsche will do it in even less.
Which Porsche?
Congratulations! My GF's Porsche will do it in even less.
Which Porsche?
And if I drive a little puddlejumper that gets 65MPG on low octaneMakes a lot of sense. Suppose I invent a fuel that gets you 200 mpg,
but it costs $200 per gallon. Would you go for it? No. MPG isn't the
object; it's MPD: miles per dollar.
On E60 (on my way to E85) I get 15% less mpg, but it costs 25% less.
That means I am getting 13% more miles/dollar than on gasoline. The
calculation is (1-0.15)/(1-0.25) = 0.85/0.75 = 1.13.
Not to mention that with ethanol I pollute less, I cause less money to
flow to bad people, and I enjoy driving more, because I get higher
torque and higher horsepower. My old 1999 OB goes 0 - 60 mph in under
12.5 seconds.
Ben
Uncle said:Not to mention that with ethanol I pollute less, I cause less money to
flow to bad people, and I enjoy driving more, because I get higher
torque and higher horsepower. My old 1999 OB goes 0 - 60 mph in under
12.5 seconds.
Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?
Rick
I'll have to ask.
It's a 928 from 1979. I haven't actually measured its 0-60 time, so I
should not have made the hasty claim. But it sure snaps my head back
when you floor it.
Ben
Rick said:Uncle Ben wrote:
Hi,
Well, I guess all that's left is to gather around the campfire and all
sing "Kumbaya!"
You pollute less? What were the emissions test results before the switch
and what were they after? Were the emissions tested for "new" polluting
compounds that could result from the burning of ethanol vs. gasoline?
You cause less money to flow to bad people? Who ARE these bad people?
You get higher torque and higher horsepower? What were the figures on
both before the switch, and what are they afterward?
You get a 0-60 time under 12.5 seconds? What was the time before the
switch? What was the car rated for when it was new?
What's that funny feeling in my shorts? Surely it's not someone trying
to blow greenhouse gases up me bum?
Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?
Rick
should not require a subsidy from ME to provide experimental fuel to
someone else. Let it compete.
Ethanol has only about 65% the BTU per volume as gasoline it
CAN NOT be as 'efficient'. Either range or mileage MUST suffer. For the
same reason diesel has better mileage than gas - more BTU/volume.
IT STILL will only be a stop gap measure
unless combined as a hybrid (or???) with a technology capable of
regenerative braking(compressed air, hydraulic
accumulators,electricity). Of those technologies, it's hard to imagine
our great grandchildren NOT using electricity as the prime mover for
personal autos.
The
Brazilian solution to this problem in the 1970-1980 period was
dictatorial: require stations to offer ethanol. Today they are
energy independent.
That would never fly here. In New York State, they offer a subsidy to
stations to install E85 pumps. So here in the Capital District (pop.
1 million +) there are four stations offering E85 and one more "coming
soon." In some states there are none at all.
....
Brazil also has a large supply of *waste* sugar cane.
Personally, I think the answer is to eliminate oil power whenever
possible, making it available for uses where it truly is the best
fuel.
And make ethanol out of it for $0.83 per gallon
If only WE had a waste product like that... 8^)
With a cellulose conversion process we could use fall leaves, straw,
cornstalks, waste paper,sawdust, forestry waste, the grass cut from
the sides of roadways, and all manner of other "waste" along with
non-food crops like sawgrass.
That would be awesome!
With a cellulose conversion process we could use fall leaves, straw,
cornstalks, waste paper,sawdust, forestry waste, the grass cut from
the sides of roadways, and all manner of other "waste" along with
non-food crops like sawgrass.
Hi,
Well, I guess all that's left is to gather around the campfire and all
sing "Kumbaya!"
You pollute less? What were the emissions test results before the switch
and what were they after? Were the emissions tested for "new" polluting
compounds that could result from the burning of ethanol vs. gasoline?
You cause less money to flow to bad people? Who ARE these bad people?
You get higher torque and higher horsepower? What were the figures on
both before the switch, and what are they afterward?
You get a 0-60 time under 12.5 seconds? What was the time before the
switch? What was the car rated for when it was new?
What's that funny feeling in my shorts? Surely it's not someone trying
to blow greenhouse gases up me bum?
Not to belittle your efforts and whatever interesting results may come
from them, but I haven't seen anything that really convinces me you've
improved upon your previous lot in life. How 'bout some numbers?
Rick
Uncle Ben said:Finally there are some numbers to report -- not from me, an ordinary
motorist without a lab, but from a major car company. Saab has
produced some interesting flex-fuel cars:
http://www.saabbiopower.co.uk/saabBiopower/
They report that on E85, torque increases 16% and horsepower increases
20%, compared to gasoline. A sporty model, the Aero X, runs on pure
100% ethanol clocks 0-62 mph (that's 0-100 km/hr, the common metric
measure) of 4.9 seconds. Top speed is quoted at 155 mph.
These cars are not yet available in the US, I understand, but physics
and chemistry are international.
I suppose I am glad to hear somebody is putting some engineering effort
toward ethanol (but I will never buy a Saab, ever, even if they weren't so
ugly), I think (in the sense that good science is good), but my Subaru was
not designed to burn Ethanol and according to my records I keep, not only
are miles per gallon down, miles per dollar are down too, so I ask, where
are the savings and what benefits do I or the environment receive from
ethanol when it is forcing my vehicle to burn more fuel to get the same
amount of work done at a higher monetary cost? There are no stations where
I live or commute selling anything more than the mandatory E10 which I
really wish would just go away. I don't see the cost savings of ethanol, if
there really are any, being passed to the consumers here in Oregon but I'm
open to being shown them if anybody can.
Uncle Ben, I would enjoy to see about a year's worth of spreadsheet data
from the time you installed your conversion kit. It's only too bad you
didn't gather it from before as well. And then perhaps a few years fromnow
to know how well the car is holding up as far as drivability issues, etc,
that could directly be related to your ethanol use. I drive for a living so
if somebody, anybody could finally show me positive data for ethanol in my
Subaru that wasn't designed for it, I'm all ears, since for the time beingI
don't see how I can avoid it.
~Brian- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I suppose I am glad to hear somebody is putting some engineering effort
toward ethanol (but I will never buy a Saab, ever, even if they weren't so
ugly), I think (in the sense that good science is good), but my Subaru was
not designed to burn Ethanol and according to my records I keep, not only
are miles per gallon down, miles per dollar are down too, so I ask, where
are the savings and what benefits do I or the environment receive from
ethanol when it is forcing my vehicle to burn more fuel to get the same
amount of work done at a higher monetary cost? There are no stations where
I live or commute selling anything more than the mandatory E10 which I
really wish would just go away. I don't see the cost savings of ethanol, if
there really are any, being passed to the consumers here in Oregon but I'm
open to being shown them if anybody can.
Uncle Ben, I would enjoy to see about a year's worth of spreadsheet data
from the time you installed your conversion kit. It's only too bad you
didn't gather it from before as well. And then perhaps a few years fromnow
to know how well the car is holding up as far as drivability issues, etc,
that could directly be related to your ethanol use. I drive for a living so
if somebody, anybody could finally show me positive data for ethanol in my
Subaru that wasn't designed for it, I'm all ears, since for the time beingI
don't see how I can avoid it.
~Brian- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
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