Is Ethanol Bad For Your Car's Engine?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2018
  • Can Ethanol Damage Car Engines? The Truth About Ethanol Fuels
    Related: Is Premium Gas Worth It? - • New Study Shows Premiu...
    Subscribe for new videos every Wednesday! - goo.gl/VZstk7
    EE Shirts! - bit.ly/2BHsiuo
    Recommended Books & Car Products - amzn.to/2BrekJm
    Will ethanol damage your car's engine? Is E10, E15, or E85 bad for you car? Can your car handle using ethanol/gasoline blends? This video aims to demystify the effects of alcohol fuels on engine wear, looking at Ethanol, Methanol, Unleaded Gasoline, and alcohol fuel blends.
    A study was conducted published in SAE which was supported by the US DOE and US Army, which looked at various fuels and their effects on engine internals, such as the cylinder liner, piston rings, cam lobes and cam followers, and valve guides. They also looked at engine oil wear metal content, as well as sludge, varnish, and deposit formation in various engine locations. The results indicate the various effects of alcohol fuels on an engine.
    Source - SAE Technical Paper 811199
    www.sae.org/publications/tech...
    Engineering Explained is a participant in the Amazon Influencer Program.
    Don't forget to check out my other pages below!
    Facebook: / engineeringexplained
    Official Website: www.howdoesacarwork.com
    Twitter: / jasonfenske13
    Instagram: / engineeringexplained
    Car Throttle: www.carthrottle.com/user/engi...
    Amazon: www.amazon.com/shop/engineeri...
    EE Extra: / @engineeringexplainede...
    NEW VIDEO EVERY WEDNESDAY!
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @EngineeringExplained
    @EngineeringExplained  Před 5 lety +1575

    A lot of folks seem to be focusing on the fact that it's a 20 hour test, rather than the results. Yet at 20 hours it shows significant differences amongst the results. Also, 20 hours at a high load is much more pressure and stress on an engine than what you do commuting, which is nearly constantly at a very low load. This is an accelerated test as far as wear is concerned. If there are discernible differences at 20 hours, you can certainly learn from the study. While many CZcams channels simply offer "word of mouth" advice, that's all too often received well, I find it surprising so many are so concerned with a peer reviewed, with controlled variables, published article in what is perhaps the world's most renown journal of automotive engineering. Skepticism is a good thing, we should always question things. This means also not drawing conclusions that the study does not state. It does not, however, mean that the study is meaningless simply because you perceive 20 hours to be a short duration. It's quite common in the industry to run accelerated benchmark tests in order to predict long term reliability. If you're putting out new engines every couple years, you simply don't have the time to run those engines (and all of the individual components involved) to 200,000 miles to see how well they do, so instead you use harsh, accelerated tests to predict future reliability. Anyways, rant over haha, I hope everyone's having a wonderful day!

    • @twotone3471
      @twotone3471 Před 5 lety +50

      The corrosive effects of Ethanol occur over time, both electrical and chemical wear, this test didn't take into account the effect of the increased amount of water in Ethanol Blends in the real world, or to two stroke motors (really the worst) or state (at least in your video ) which materials the motor was made from (cast Iron Block or aluminum?) so many variables to state conclusively that its just so, when its just not. Yes, in the right conditions, ethanol is both a viable and cleaner burning fuel than Gasoline. That however doesn't take into account the amount of fossil fuels used to grow, harvest, transport, and process the corn into Ethanol. It's a fuel, but don't confuse it with being a "Green" energy alternative.

    • @Stranio34
      @Stranio34 Před 5 lety +9

      Didn't sound like a rent, but the thing I can't find is. Ethanol is more corrosive, you have to replace fuel lines but is it more corrosive any where else or is that just it? Thanks for the video I learned a lot from it

    • @StefanAlexandruGeogloman
      @StefanAlexandruGeogloman Před 5 lety +7

      Just a random question, is it better for an engine to keep using the standard 5W30 oil after 15 yers and more than 120k km, or switch to 10w40? Mechanics said to put 10W40 now, considering the older engine and the fact that it now burns some oil. Thanks!!

    • @torque350hp
      @torque350hp Před 5 lety +12

      A while back I watched something saying in Brazil I think it is they only have high content ethanol fuel. All their cars run it from old to new and they seem to be ok.

    • @CycloneCyd
      @CycloneCyd Před 5 lety +47

      What you call "word of mouth" I call "urban myths". I sometimes think Engineers like ourselves are wasting our breath (so to speak) trying to educate with FACTS. The biggest thing wrong with the internet of things is that it's made every numbskull into an expert.
      The most common one is that premium fuel isn't "worth it" (whatever 'it' is?) because all petrol is the same. And how do we know this? Because Bob is a tanker driver and has 'seen' the tankers always being filled from the same outlets at the refinary ..... YOU know the rest of the song ....
      Keep the faith Jason

  • @AliHSyed
    @AliHSyed Před 5 lety +1330

    So you're telling me I can't drink and drive, but my car can?

    • @gabumoh
      @gabumoh Před 5 lety +28

      Pretty much

    • @pizzablender
      @pizzablender Před 5 lety +12

      Yes, I remember teh scare that 'ethanol is an aggressive chemical sure to eat your fuel system. Hey, fancy another beer? Ever seen it dissolve anything?

    • @garrettburrows442
      @garrettburrows442 Před 5 lety +8

      @@pizzablender I've haven't seen any wear on my fuel system or mechanical parts on my 04 grand prix. Been running 3/4 e85 and 1/4 gas and marvel mystery oil.

    • @meely9937
      @meely9937 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes

    • @BensCoffeeRants
      @BensCoffeeRants Před 5 lety +3

      Pop can dissolve stuff for sure, not sure about beer. Ethanol isn't going to damage anything if your car was designed to use it. Most modern cars are designed to use up to 15% or 20% ethanol in Canada most of our gas has up to 10% ethanol. Flex Fuel cars can handle higher amounts of ethanol.

  • @JamesHayesFL
    @JamesHayesFL Před 2 lety +24

    As a mechanic during my college years, the concern about ethanol was not what it did to an engine but, what it did to the inside of the rubber fuel lines, that did the most damage to the engine. Ethanol will degrade rubber and, as the rubber begins to disintegrate inside the rubber fuel lines it turns into a gel that comes up the injection or carburetion on older cars. I never saw damage done by ethanol from a mechanical standpoint.But, have seen the damage it’s done through fuel line degradation. Thank you

  • @johnhall8364
    @johnhall8364 Před 4 lety +629

    The biggest issue with ethanol blend fuels isn’t the rotating assembly of the engine. The issue is rubber and plastic components in fuel supply accessories like carburetors, fuel tanks, fuel pumps, and flexible fuel lines.

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Před 4 lety +48

      E10 is not suited for older engines. All cars build from the mid 2000s are prepared for it though.

    • @daveedwards6727
      @daveedwards6727 Před 4 lety +47

      Baron von Limbourgh People seem to forgot just how long E10 has been around. My 89 Toyota pickup had its original manual and it was rated for E0-E10. I’d venture to say any car made in the last 30 years can run on E10 just fine. E15, on the other hand, is a different question.

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Před 4 lety +34

      @@daveedwards6727 not all older cars are suited for e10 though. Lots of cars where but it only became law in the mid 2000s.
      My e39s from the late 90s all where suited as well. But my 90s clio wasn't.
      Guess it depended on the manufacturer.

    • @telocho
      @telocho Před 4 lety +20

      My 1993 Opel is rated to be allowed to use E10, but after using it for two years I can tell that my mono-point injector or its rubber sealing rings started failing slowly and leaking fuel, until the point where the engine would be flooded on cold starts and not run until waiting the petrol to vaporize. Finally last December it completely died and the petrol finally made it through the piston rings to the oil sump, where it got in the oil filter and so it starved the engine of oil. End of life, piston rods seized. Motor oil smelling strongly like gasoline. Would this never have happened on E95? Who knows, but it's my experience at least.

    • @IDontWantAHandle101
      @IDontWantAHandle101 Před 4 lety +6

      Agree. Viton rubber seems to be the way forward. I run a number of older vehicles (1924 to 2001) and its just a case of working though the system end to end. Expensive but not impossible and you can be sure not to have leaks etc. None of the cars or bikes seem to have any I'll effects from e10 or similar. Most of mine are setup with a rich AFR. Nothing to report so far :)

  • @chrisfix
    @chrisfix Před 5 lety +1362

    Awesome/informative video as always. After seeing this, I'm curious about how it affects other stuff related to the engines like fuel lines, gas tanks, fuel pumps, etc. I know for boats it is a big issue with corrosion in aluminum fuel tanks and in fuel line breakdown which you explain around 8:30. It would be cool to see the rate at which it can cause corrosion or damage to these parts.

    • @bryanjk
      @bryanjk Před 5 lety +19

      I've had to replace fuel lines on my boat from corrosion. Also having to stabilize the fuel tank can be an extra step since it's not used all the time.

    • @ViewpointUnique
      @ViewpointUnique Před 5 lety +43

      The ethanol will eat aluminum carbs on small engines, ESPECIALLY materials produced in China. Small engine tech since 2004. Chinese parts and ethanol make us lots of repair money, unfortunately.

    • @adanlopez5251
      @adanlopez5251 Před 5 lety +7

      ChrisFix hi

    • @jonathan643
      @jonathan643 Před 5 lety +26

      Hello mister Fix!
      i have an important question:
      How can a camshaft have different wear when using different fuel?
      Think about it...

    • @sacrificialrook6283
      @sacrificialrook6283 Před 5 lety +50

      E10 is an absolute nightmare for the motorcycle community. You can NOT let a carbed bike sit for any length of time anymore. It's been especially hard on the vintage stuff. Lots of pitted carb bodies and blown petcocks, both of which are essentially unobtanium today.

  • @Wayne_Robinson
    @Wayne_Robinson Před 5 lety +194

    I wasn't aware of that SAE study and appreciate you illustrating the findings. Color coding the numbers really helps highlight the extremes in each category.

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  Před 5 lety +12

      Happy to hear it!

    • @pizzablender
      @pizzablender Před 5 lety +5

      Motor oil is also reformulated to better withstand the alcohol content of fuels. At least for ACEA spec.

    • @Wayne_Robinson
      @Wayne_Robinson Před 5 lety +3

      Great point. The parameters they measured seem like a relevant set but would be interesting to see if this study has been replicated by other labs. It also doesn't address potential damage to rubber or plastic components, or the possibility that alcohol-fuel mixes might be more hygroscopic than pure gasoline and lead to increased corrosion.

    • @kayforyouj5837
      @kayforyouj5837 Před měsícem

      Why didn't the study go to 2,000 hours run test? How did they go down to so many zeros for wear measurements?

  • @acward2007
    @acward2007 Před 2 lety +176

    As the UK has just gone from E5 to E10 this month (Sept 2021) this was very interesting and quite reassuring to hear. I'm glad this popped up in my suggestion list. Great content. All the best!

    • @stan110782
      @stan110782 Před 2 lety +12

      Do you drive an older car?
      I daily drive a 30 year old Ford, engine wear was never a concern.
      Fuel lines and carb internals are going to perish with the increase in ethanol.
      I replaced my hard fuel lines to modern lines last year but no modern upgrades for carb internals on the old carbs.

    • @JosephiGoebbeli
      @JosephiGoebbeli Před 2 lety +2

      only difference is that here in the uk it is bioethanol as opposed to regular ethanol

    • @LostinWales
      @LostinWales Před 2 lety +7

      My subaru hates e10 and the inlaws subaru barely even runs on it!!!! God know what long term use will do to them but we're not taking the risk!!! Super unleaded only now

    • @pauldethick6175
      @pauldethick6175 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LostinWales its probably the fuel mapping causing the issues, the engine needs to inject more ethanol to get the same bang as a smaller quantity of normal petrol. Couple that with the issues of old lines, gaskets etc it's just easier to run super now.

    • @c-19thegreatlie62
      @c-19thegreatlie62 Před 2 lety +10

      E10 has screwed my brothers 2016 honda cbr. It sounds as rough as a clapped out banger now

  • @FSolla
    @FSolla Před 4 lety +170

    In Brazil we have Hydrated Ethanol (96% Ethanol) as a fuel option at any gas station and we have cars projected to run with ethanol since the 80s. My car is a flex fuel from 2010 and it's running with ethanol since it was new, it has 160 000 Kilometres (100 000 Miles) and the engine still sounds like new.

    • @juliogonzo2718
      @juliogonzo2718 Před 3 lety +37

      Ethanol makes sense in Brazil as you have sugar cane, here it comes from corn

    • @bradleypumba
      @bradleypumba Před 3 lety +3

      @@juliogonzo2718 wtf lmao 😂😂😂😂

    • @juliogonzo2718
      @juliogonzo2718 Před 3 lety +20

      @@bradleypumba it is the sugar in the crop that is fermented to produce the ethanol

    • @bradleypumba
      @bradleypumba Před 3 lety +16

      @@juliogonzo2718wtf u right lol I thought u were jokeing but nah I looked it up and your for real lmao anyways you learn something new every day

    • @alocarioca
      @alocarioca Před 2 lety +17

      Thanks for this awesome information my Brazilian brother. I’m living in the USA and always wondered why they won’t try that Brazilian Technology here as well…,
      But the assumption I have may sound more like a Conspiracy theory though, which is “The Big Oil Industry of America”, forbid such technology to ever start here and deeply take away their profits.
      Also i believe Brazil has sugar cane fields that can support your home made fuel, but I’ve heard here in the USA, they don’t have that option, and would have to buy sugar cane from Cuba, but the embargo into Cuba, forbids that.
      So I don’t believe America will ever use the Brazilian ethanol fuel system…, unfortunately.

  • @TheGibbidygibbidygoo
    @TheGibbidygibbidygoo Před 5 lety +42

    In my experience with the E10 Fuel in Australia, you get a fair drop in fuel economy with E10 fuel which negates the slight dollar saving they give you at the pump for it.

    • @Hernan7929
      @Hernan7929 Před 4 lety +1

      Yap.That´s true. Here in Brazil, ethanol is cheaper but gives a worse fuel economy. Always around a 20 or 30 % less mileage. That´s why brazilian small car are built with bigger fuel tanks.

    • @wvadam
      @wvadam Před 4 lety

      @@Hernan7929 Out of curiosity, how much are you paying for ethanol vs. gasoline or diesel right now?

    • @doughartmann9272
      @doughartmann9272 Před 4 lety +4

      If your O2 sensor is working, maximum drop is 3% using E10 (100% has a 30% oxygen content). In Melbourne, E10 is generally 5-6% cheaper than regular petrol, still works out better and it's better for your car, cleaner cyl heads and valves.

    • @peterhart4301
      @peterhart4301 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Hernan7929 When I was using E10 in Australia (BF Falcon XR6), my ute lost power and economy on ULP.
      It gained power and economy on PULP.
      I got increased power, same as PULP on E10 and worse fuel economy.
      But, using E10 it got better Kilometers/miles per $$$ than all other fuels.

    • @davidwarren4569
      @davidwarren4569 Před 21 dnem

      @@doughartmann9272my Mazda 3 running on E10 gets the same fuel economy as 98. Go figure.mazda recommends E10 for my vehicle.

  • @bendeleted9155
    @bendeleted9155 Před 5 lety +148

    Thanks for mentioning the moisture and phase separation issues. It's murder on small carb jets and passages if the gas sits a while. Stabil does nothing for this.

    • @JoeHynes284
      @JoeHynes284 Před 5 lety +8

      was wondering why all the warnings on lawnmowers and such, that makes sense.

    • @bendeleted9155
      @bendeleted9155 Před 5 lety +9

      @@JoeHynes284if you're in a state with only ethanol road gas, they do sell straight gas for small engines, but it's about $20 per gallon, by the gallon at home depot & Lowe's.

    • @JoeHynes284
      @JoeHynes284 Před 5 lety +5

      Gear Whine I have small property so all my stuffs electric but I had always wondered why the ethanol would be an issue not thinking about what you pointed out with the carburetors that’s a good point

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Před 5 lety +11

      Joe schmo
      Also, ethanol has a different stoichiometric ratio than gasoline; it needs to be about 30% richer. While a computerized ECU can adjust for different fuel blends, a mechanical carb needs a re-jet or it will run dangerously lean.

    • @JoeHynes284
      @JoeHynes284 Před 5 lety +1

      I haven't personally had any issues, but I hear what you are saying. I have stored several vehicles with fuel stabilizer for deployments aboard submarines. Just my experience, I'd rather be lucky then good I guess

  • @cyrilpatton238
    @cyrilpatton238 Před 3 lety +2

    I appreciate that this video is just under the 10 minute mark. Thanks Engeenring Explained! Love your videos, keep up the great work!

  • @arxaaron
    @arxaaron Před 2 lety +33

    The fuel system damage of ethanol is a big issue in the motorcycle and power boating sectors. The tendency for seasonal use means a LOT of older engines out there and the long fuel term storage issues are more problematic. Would love to see any research available on additives that deal with these issues. Perhaps the simplest and ideal option would be to keep Ethanol out of PREMIUM gasoline all together.

  • @jesusmvr1
    @jesusmvr1 Před 2 lety +61

    “Ethanol has less energy content”… @ 9:20. I recently found out that sometime in the early 2000’s there was a big push for E10 as way to create a domestic demand for corn (from which ethanol is made). The push for E10 was absolutely not a practical one, it was not a “green” initiative, it was purely a way to stimulate the agriculture economy.

    • @crazydragy4233
      @crazydragy4233 Před 2 lety +9

      Not surprising. What I don't get why is why farmers are so obsessed with corn. It's not impossible to switch to other crops.

    • @rogerpenrod5214
      @rogerpenrod5214 Před 2 lety +5

      You got that right! Chuck Grassley made all the farmers millionaires.

    • @PapaA7145
      @PapaA7145 Před 2 lety +9

      Not all farmers are millionaires but the corporate farms have made a killing and get richer from the subsidies. The family farms have suffered in comparison.

    • @nachoisme
      @nachoisme Před 2 lety +5

      Always follow the money

    • @bkearnaghan
      @bkearnaghan Před rokem +10

      I suspect that ethanol is a huge energy waster as opposed to 100 percent gasoline. Why? Because how much fuel and fertilizer is used to grow all that corn? Any studies done on that? If yes, let me know.

  • @frankburns8871
    @frankburns8871 Před 5 lety +260

    "Don't do meth" goes for cars as well as for humans.

    • @armstrong2052
      @armstrong2052 Před 4 lety +10

      Good 1, fun tidbit 4 ya. The entire reason we run ethanol is to save the environment. Yet the studies show that the farming practices required to produce it, actually has a higher carbon footprint than just straight gas. Swing and a miss for progressivism, & yet we still do it while knowing better.

    • @nicoleibundgut534
      @nicoleibundgut534 Před 3 lety +1

      Methanol and Ethanol is no the same as far as i know.

    • @adorabasilwinterpock6035
      @adorabasilwinterpock6035 Před 3 lety +3

      @@armstrong2052 Don’t be intentionally dense. If you make the ethanol using waste biomass then its better for the environment, but if you grow sugarcane just to make the ethanol then its bad.

    • @armstrong2052
      @armstrong2052 Před 3 lety +3

      @@adorabasilwinterpock6035 incorrect

    • @adorabasilwinterpock6035
      @adorabasilwinterpock6035 Před 3 lety +3

      @@armstrong2052 yes you are

  • @ericdavi1231
    @ericdavi1231 Před 4 lety +1

    You nailed this! I own a boat and a business that has multiple pieces of equipment with small carbureted engines. I’ve learned a lot about E10 vs Gasoline. I wish I could have seen this video years ago!

  • @JacobAnawalt
    @JacobAnawalt Před 4 lety +14

    Thank you for sharing this. You do clearly focus on the engine wear, which the study covers, but as you mention at the end that isn't the problems my vehicles have with ethanol. My small engines are more likely to gum up over winter and my E85/flex car fuel system components are much more expensive than the parts for the non-flex version of the same vehicle.

  • @meghanprimosch718
    @meghanprimosch718 Před 5 lety +4

    Any chance of you doing a video on how flex fuel kits work? I love your videos! I'm new to learning about cars and your videos explain everything in a way I can understand. Thank you!

  • @charlespetersonii6989
    @charlespetersonii6989 Před 5 lety +10

    I love e85. Been using it for the last 8 years with 0 issues. No fuel problems like everyone mentions. I've converted a couple dodge neons of mine a 01 dodge ram 5.2L and my 08 dodge avenger. All run amazing on e85 and its much cheaper. 👍🏁

    • @THe9-3MAnIaC
      @THe9-3MAnIaC Před 2 lety +4

      Also love E85, petrol is just rubbish compared to E85. I blend it in my outboard from 1983/1984, my moped and some lawnmowers. It's soooooo much difference between petrol and E85 in the lawnmowers when you are breathing in the exhaust the hole time, E85 smells sweet and I don't got shortness of breath, and it's better for the engine 😎 E85 is the future ❤️

  • @alvarocarvalho2673
    @alvarocarvalho2673 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks a lot. These videos are all very enlightening! Have an awesome day!

  • @RobertSmith-bs1mo
    @RobertSmith-bs1mo Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the video, clear and concise!

  • @FrmerK20
    @FrmerK20 Před 5 lety +273

    Ethanol gives "less" fuel economy, but is (atleast where I live, sweden) cheaper. So you have to fill up more but it costs about the same overall. We have e85

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  Před 5 lety +89

      Yes! I'm in Sweden currently and it's interesting seeing E85 at all the gas stations.

    • @FrmerK20
      @FrmerK20 Před 5 lety +25

      oh you are, how come you're here? and where in sweden are you?
      And its nice to have e85 because we have quite a large old volvo community in sweden, and to get some juice out of those old engines it helps lol

    • @Snorklaren0
      @Snorklaren0 Před 5 lety +5

      The gov wanted everyone to buy flexfuel cars in Sweden. The cost for e85 have skyrocket and they remove it from alot of gas stations.

    • @FrmerK20
      @FrmerK20 Před 5 lety

      ikr suger. Miljömuppar ger en aids

    • @Zilchness
      @Zilchness Před 5 lety +2

      @@EngineeringExplained Hello Jason,
      I have stumbled across an older video from Koenigsegg which it covers an a custom build engine.
      I was wondering if you have encountered any research on "Combustion Chamber Throttling"
      If you have please give us some information.
      My guess just by looking at the setup is that it has coils wrapped around the piston and the have controlled current that flows through the cylinder walls in ORDER to control the push/pull movement of the pistons. Thanks for You're time Jason

  •  Před 5 lety +3

    In Thailand, we have E10, E20 and E85 since quite many years. I never had a problem with my Mazdas running these fuels. I tested all of them with the new Mazda 3. Power and acceleration is the same. But fuel consumption with E85 is about 27% higher. E85 is cheaper here, but at the end, the benefit was only about 7% less costs per kilometre. I stayed with E10 because E85 is not available at all gasoline stations and I didn't like to refill so often.

  • @videomaniac108
    @videomaniac108 Před 5 lety

    Thanks Jason, this is very interesting and helpful.

  • @darkstarrally
    @darkstarrally Před 4 lety

    Great video as usual. But I can't help but notice the quickjack pump and hoses in the background. I just got one and for my application I love it so far!

  • @springerbens9306
    @springerbens9306 Před 4 lety +48

    Here in Brazil we have “flex” cars that can use ethanol or gasoline. Basically every new car her is flex, even BMW or Mercedes.
    Our normal gasoline have 25% of ethanol.
    We also used to have “ethanol only” cars on 80 or 90s, so you chose a model of car, and than you had to chose if you want it to use ethanol or gasoline. Most of this “ethanol only” cars still alive 30 years later.
    Our Corolla now is the first “hybrid flex” car of the world, 16km/l at 0,70 dollar per litter without using fossil fuels, that is pretty good.

    • @PetSounds38
      @PetSounds38 Před 4 lety +1

      Have you got peugeot 406 coupé in Brazil ?

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před 4 lety

      If your car is Japanese and built after 1974 it can run unleaded and 100% ethanol. All it may need is a bit of re-tuning, to increase the air flow.

    • @MCA0090
      @MCA0090 Před 4 lety +5

      Some Flex fuel cars have different power and tork according to the fuel that is being used. My car has 101cv with gas and 104cv with ethanol. My sister owns a 2015 VW Fox 1.6 that has 110cv with gas and 120cv with ethanol, some turbo engines also benefits of it, VW 1.0 TSI engines deliver 116cv with gas and 128cv with ethanol.
      Another interesting thing is that the fuel filter of flex engines is usually made of plastic and installed in an easy and accessible place because it needs to be replaced in shorter intervals (like 10.000km or 15.000km) and they are very cheap.

    • @MGregolin
      @MGregolin Před 4 lety +1

      Chevrolet Omega 2.0 Alcool: a great engine! Just an Opel OHC, 8-valve, 4 cylinder, 12:1 compression ratio, Bosch motronic 1.5.2 with knock sensor and 130hp! Amazing for a 1993 2 liters 8v engine! The same gasoline engine: 116hp. I own one, wigh 200.000km I rebuild the engine. The pistons, valves was very clean, no carbon deposits. Minimal valves wear. I was surprised... Here in Brazil we have “ hydrous ethanol”, 92% ethanol, leads to more anti-knock power, more compression ratio and more hps!

    • @EDARDO112
      @EDARDO112 Před 4 lety +1

      @Blind Squid I actually test it in my car and ethanol (E95) is a better fuel, more horsepower feels better, but usually it's more cost effective to use gasoline (E25), and yes my car is flex

  • @Brad-k
    @Brad-k Před 5 lety +8

    love to see a review on Shell V-max vs the regular shell gasoline and ware plus carbon deposits vs the 2.

  • @Zig_Was_Here
    @Zig_Was_Here Před 3 lety

    I thank you for making this very informative & well done video.

  • @michaelbrown9031
    @michaelbrown9031 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, which answered a couple questions but I have a number more! Is there anything online that details more of the comparisons between using petrol and ethanol, power, mpg, how an engine needs to be mapped to suit pure ethanol etc. I'm keen on moving my RX to ethanol as opposed to petrol, for sustainable fuel sourcing and emissions reasons, but would like to get more info on how best to apply it to a car such as mine.
    Great videos, always an interesting watch. Hope you're keeping safe in these mad times.

  • @JeffDickson87
    @JeffDickson87 Před 5 lety +9

    It'd be awesome to have a modern version of this study with a direct injected motor- I'd be curious to see if there is any difference vs what I assume was either early fuel injection, or maybe even a carburetted engine. Good video, though!

    • @hennybee5790
      @hennybee5790 Před 10 měsíci

      I would say it would be the same otherwise they would have already done the test

  • @justinemery3374
    @justinemery3374 Před 5 lety +147

    I am a marine technician I see the damaging effects of ethanol all the time. It eats apart the inside of fuel lines and primer bulbs. Looks like black sand in the carb bowl, plugs up jets, etc.

    • @afrojojo9475
      @afrojojo9475 Před 4 lety +16

      I'm still waiting for all these problems. Been using e10 in a 25hp Johnson for 10 years now. Though I use stabilizer in every fillup. Sits 6 months for the winter each year and fires right up in the spring. No problems here.

    • @427SuperSnake1
      @427SuperSnake1 Před 4 lety +10

      That’s because it’s not made for 2 stroke engines. Its made for 4 stroke modern engines.

    • @afrojojo9475
      @afrojojo9475 Před 4 lety +1

      @Rusty Highlander why would I? I said it works great as is with stabilizer of course.

    • @danawilkes6174
      @danawilkes6174 Před 4 lety +2

      @@afrojojo9475 You answered your own question....

    • @tronicit
      @tronicit Před 4 lety +1

      That because the engines you witness have probably done more than 20 hours on ethanol. 🤫

  • @cayr7745
    @cayr7745 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the explanation. Well said. Keep up the good work.

  • @DanBeamZ
    @DanBeamZ Před 2 lety

    great info Jason!!!

  • @mikethebeast1012
    @mikethebeast1012 Před 5 lety +13

    From what I've always heard the concern is less about metal parts wearing and more about the ethanol attacking the plastic/rubber parts you mentioned at the end. Id be interested in a study looking into the effects on those components

    • @BensCoffeeRants
      @BensCoffeeRants Před 5 lety +1

      I think newer cars are made with plastic /rubber (silicone maybe?) parts that are more resistant to corrosion since they're aware most gas stations are putting in at least 10% ethanol now, so it shouldn't be a problem unless you have a classic car maybe.

    • @alanmccarthy8932
      @alanmccarthy8932 Před 5 lety +3

      Due to the hygroscopic nature of the fuel its not just in your car, its the older tanks at the service station also.

    • @FrankGutowski-ls8jt
      @FrankGutowski-ls8jt Před 5 lety

      Alan Mccarthy
      Storage tanks collect condensate whether or not the fuel contains ethanol. More water puddles in pure gasoline storage tanks, less in those with alcohol fuels.

    • @alanmccarthy8932
      @alanmccarthy8932 Před 5 lety +1

      @@FrankGutowski-ls8jt less water in tanks with a fuel that absorbs water. Bugger water puddles inside tanks that dont contain a liquid that mixes with water. Makes sense.

    • @FrankGutowski-ls8jt
      @FrankGutowski-ls8jt Před 5 lety

      Alan Mccarthy
      Some commenters suggest ethanol reaches out and grabs water out of the air, whereas it’s just encountering whatever water daily thermal cycling draws into a storage tank. I was surprised by how much water can condense in a humid climate in a container that’s not sealed. I made the mistake of not filling my gas tank and having it less than half full most of the time. It took a sizable dose of isopropyl alcohol to get it dissolved. The water was up to the bottom of the in-tank pump.

  • @dwightcarlson7136
    @dwightcarlson7136 Před 5 lety +118

    What about other 'external ' engine components such as fuel lines , fuel pumps, etc. especially in older cars?

    • @deathdoor
      @deathdoor Před 5 lety +18

      He addressed that 8:00.

    • @algrayson8965
      @algrayson8965 Před 4 lety +2

      How about my alternator, water pump and transmission?

    • @boilerhousegarage
      @boilerhousegarage Před 4 lety +4

      It kills them. Use avgas on pre-catalytic cars.

    • @pseudopetrus
      @pseudopetrus Před 4 lety +5

      @@algrayson8965 I was wondering about my steering wheel?

    • @stuckinmygarage6220
      @stuckinmygarage6220 Před 3 lety +1

      @Boomkikker being serious, here, i do like the sweet corn smell...

  • @andrekemp5059
    @andrekemp5059 Před 2 lety

    Thank you very mutch for making this Video!
    Super great info

  • @freddieshields5697
    @freddieshields5697 Před rokem +2

    I hadn’t really heard of people worrying about engine wear until your video. I have however heard plenty of people worrying about the fuel system. I’ve also heard of people w/damaged fuel lines.

  • @MatthewMcCannJr
    @MatthewMcCannJr Před 3 lety +11

    I would love to see a study on Ethanol wear in marine applications. This study has stated /demonstrated higher water content in the oil. I know that many marine gas stations have gone back to pure gasoline probably for this reason.

    • @jimmio3727
      @jimmio3727 Před 2 lety

      It's not the water that's the problem.
      Slight water content is actually a fantastic thing for your engine. Water is incompressible, but when it's very little, it steams off, removing carbon deposits.
      The real issue is marine stuff is very often sold at a price that is significantly higher than automotive parts, but they use the old rubbers to save the manufacturer money (and guarantee return business) and many marine applications use aluminum fuel tanks for weight savings. These are the issues. Crap parts, incompatible chemistries with the fuel tank.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před rokem +1

      @@jimmio3727 ethanol is crap

  • @Devinfrbs
    @Devinfrbs Před 5 lety +6

    I'd be curious how this same test, performed with modern engines that generally are turbo charged small displacement, would perform. If it would be any different.

  • @Popashistory
    @Popashistory Před 2 lety

    I really appreciate the research that went into your presentation. Thank you. I rebuilt a 2010 Chevy 2.2 L Ecotec engine with VVT (Variable Valve Timing) last year. It failed due to low compression and, after disassembly , it 0 PSI compression was caused by a build up of material on the intake valve stems exactly where the injectors direct their spray. The engine has 225,000 km on it and everything else was well within spec except the timing chain and its associated parts. The failure was obviously due to the E10 fuel but with that mileage, it is pretty hard to call it a fail.
    I am not a mechanic but a retired physicist so my point of view may be a little different.
    I do, however, see a large fuel related failure due to ethanol in small engines, lawn mowers and chain saws, where the carburation components fail completely. This is most likely due to the corrosive nature of the ethanol. In the case of small engines, I would strongly recommend the use of non-alcohol fuel, or, at the very least, regular grade fuel that has less alcohol.

  • @bsouza1675
    @bsouza1675 Před 2 lety

    Excellent presentation! Thank you 🙏

  • @bside8568
    @bside8568 Před 5 lety +5

    How about the energy density of the different fluids and the engine consumption ? Was that tested? You spoke about the reduction but not about a factor of impact

  • @dootu
    @dootu Před 5 lety +3

    From personal testing some years ago I found that the price for e10 needed to be about 3 cents cheaper than unleaded (at Aussie $ 1.25/litre) to make up for the efficiency loss. But there is normally only a 1c difference in the price.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před 4 lety

      All you need to do is increase the amount of oxygen in the mix.

  • @bernhardk7720
    @bernhardk7720 Před 3 lety

    Thank you. Very informative.

  • @garyrielly1955
    @garyrielly1955 Před 2 lety

    Great video. In Australia I use E10 in my 2004 VYII Holden Adventra LX8 all wheel Drive. The LS1 V8 runs well on this fuel with no issues and has been for the 5 years I have had the car. With the E10 it depends on what service station you get your fuel from as to it’s Octane. I usually go for the United Fuel where the E10 is rated at 95 Octane or Mobil where their E10 is rated at 94 Octane. All others their E10 is rate at 91 Octane.

  • @tinkeringtimmermans5249
    @tinkeringtimmermans5249 Před 2 lety +4

    Perhaps you could do a video on the impact of alcohol on different old (carbureted) and new (injected) engine fuel systems? I notice when pulling apart small engine carbs the regular e10 gas leaves a lot of gunk in the fuel bowl and passages.

    • @jimmio3727
      @jimmio3727 Před 2 lety

      Gasoline mixtures go bad. Gas caps must vent or fuel cannot flow into the carburetor, and as everyone should know, oxidation (exposed to oxygen) destroys everything. This is why humans can't breathe straight oxygen for very long, as it literally destroys the lungs given enough time.
      There are stabilizers to prevent this from happening so fast, but ideally, you want to burn that fuel within a week and run the engine until the tank and carburetor bowl is dry. Hope this helps!

  • @hodiesnepaul8306
    @hodiesnepaul8306 Před 5 lety +4

    Here in france e85 is a third of the price of regular gasoline. Lots of people a running e85 with : Nothing (they mix or they risk), they remap, they install a flexfuel kit or the do some fueling mods such as injectors.
    A guy I know has a citroën saxo vts which has 580 000 km with 300 000 km on e85 with only biggers injectors.

  • @theDane70
    @theDane70 Před rokem

    Great explanation, analysing engine wear is the best approach out there.... great work....

  • @duaneluchsinger5736
    @duaneluchsinger5736 Před 4 lety

    Great info...thanks. Any idea(or video)as to whether or not adding acetone to gas increases fuel mileage?

  • @woogymodel
    @woogymodel Před 4 lety +54

    I'd love to see the same study done with a natural gas (CNG) engine :)

    • @claude6318
      @claude6318 Před 4 lety +5

      Please do this

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před 4 lety +11

      If you look at heads from CNG or LPG cars they are as clean as they day they were installed after 150k. The biggest problem facing your head is un-burnt liquid fuel washing out the oil for the piston bores. This does not happen with gas fuels. Why petrol is still sold is a mystery to me...

    • @BigUriel
      @BigUriel Před 4 lety +3

      ​@Blind Squid If you started using CNG/LPG to replace petrol the huge change in demand would see its price skyrocket. This is a particularly major problem when these fuels are predominantly used today for residential heating, so millions of cars switching to them would mean millions of people not being able to afford heating their homes in winter.
      Also, LPG is already about the same real price as petrol. The difference in the price you pay at the pump is pretty much entirely tax. The only reason petrol is so cheap in the US is precisely because it doesn't pay that extra tax.

    • @tramvaj1271
      @tramvaj1271 Před 4 lety +4

      @@BigUriel Hi i Must correct you. But using LPG or CNG is not as heavy as you think. If you use Electricity and for that time fill your car. 4-5 kg per hour i can fill at home. For my Renault Menage 1.6 it mean per hour fling I can go 100 kilometers because it consume 4-6 kg Respectably. And it is not bad Millage. If you need average for two cars 200 kilometers per day. You only use 4 hour per day for effective heating. Trust me Electric Car is way more infrastructure Demanding Than CNG or even LPG. LPG is trash of Oil. They quite literally burning them if you do not to drive on it.

    • @pieterdewit9081
      @pieterdewit9081 Před 4 lety +7

      LPG is a superb fuel IMHO. Been using it for decades. The only thing you 'd better change on a modern car are the spark plugs. You may need another heat grade. Iridium or double platinum types are fine. And LPG is also much more "friendly" for the environment. :-)

  • @sbfguy7793
    @sbfguy7793 Před 5 lety +3

    I used e85 for the first time in my flex fuel Ford ranger. I was surprised to see that my check engine light for my O2 sensor had shut off. Also I can feel a dramatic difference in throttle response. I haven't tried it in the winter yet, but so far I'm sticking with e85 24/7.

    • @tracklizard4018
      @tracklizard4018 Před 3 lety

      The short guide to ethanol: More power, less mileage, won't start in winter.

    • @heitorbernardes7977
      @heitorbernardes7977 Před 3 lety +1

      Your ecu has to run with e85 to "learn" the fuel... Just give it a few days, or mix it with gas and increase e85 along time

  • @gordonjamieson861
    @gordonjamieson861 Před 2 lety

    Thank you 🙏 for sharing your findings with us. Regards from Gordon in the U.K. 👍

  • @tonypuntillo4931
    @tonypuntillo4931 Před 4 lety

    great explanation and video. thank you

  • @jeromeburrasca6710
    @jeromeburrasca6710 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video! Now that regular unleaded gasoline is $2.20 higher per gallon than E85 here in Southern California it’s totally worth it to buy. The E85 has 105 octane so it runs better and keeps engine clean even though it’s about 15% less fuel efficient. You should do a update to this video now that gasoline prices are soaring.

    • @cocainecowboy1717
      @cocainecowboy1717 Před 2 lety +1

      higher octane does not equal more power lol, especially on a stock tuned car. octane number is a measurement of detonation resistance.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před rokem

      Only for californian fools

  • @mamooth
    @mamooth Před 5 lety +16

    That was very interesting to watch as usuual, thank you! And well, Cars in Brazil have been runing pure ethanol since the 70's. Our gasoline is @ 27% currently, but that should be increased soon - poor us with non-flex cars.

    • @mamooth
      @mamooth Před 5 lety

      É verdade, broder! Erro de char

    • @ToliniDaniel
      @ToliniDaniel Před 5 lety +1

      Allegedly E27. It's very common to run an OBDII tool to find it running on over 35% ethanol mixture...

  • @Oklahoman-in6ph
    @Oklahoman-in6ph Před 2 lety

    I like this channel. All is very well explained "cut and dried" Thanks...

  • @fredbach6039
    @fredbach6039 Před 5 lety +2

    Canadian Mohawk 90 grade with ethanol kept my spark plugs way cleaner in my old oil burner 390 Ford wagon in which I was running 20/50 oil. I changed the plugs often and the difference was astounding. A little bit of ethanol definitely eats cylinder deposits.

  • @markdefelice3700
    @markdefelice3700 Před 4 lety +134

    Everytime I use 10% ethanol I get at least 1 - 2 mpg less then when I use straight unleaded gas ! And I do track it !

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Před 4 lety +55

      @midnitesquirldog1 lol, over reacting much.

    • @falconerd343
      @falconerd343 Před 4 lety +24

      well naturally, ethanol simply has less energy density. Not really much issue except when the gas companies charge the same amount for E10 as 100% Gas, even though ethanol is cheaper thanks to gov subsidies.

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Před 4 lety +12

      @@falconerd343 e10 is about 10% cheaper here. For regular cars it is a perfectly fine alternative imho.

    • @justmechanicthings
      @justmechanicthings Před 4 lety +11

      @midnitesquirldog1 Car dealers do NOT love it. I work at a dealer and the jobs we want are quick and easy service intervals, that's where the money is. Head gaskets and mechanical repairs are often a ball ache, take longer than the allotted labour time to complete and come with hidden expenses to the company.

    • @wvadam
      @wvadam Před 4 lety +1

      You can get straight 87 octane gas? or are you comparing E10 87 octane to 91 octane premium gas without ethanol?

  • @jessstuart7495
    @jessstuart7495 Před 5 lety +15

    Were these tests performed using carbureted or fuel-injected engines? Were the carburetors jetted (adjusted) to run near stoichiometric for the different fuels? Running an engine too rich or too lean will have a large effect on engine wear.

    • @kodiak2fitty
      @kodiak2fitty Před 5 lety +2

      In a study published in 1981? I doubt they bothered to test a fuel injected system.

    • @kevinak1995
      @kevinak1995 Před 5 lety

      It's an americam study they probably used carburators till 2010. Mid range RPM probably also means about 1500rpm.
      And just to be clear using only one engine makes the whole study irrelevant because:
      Version 1, the same engine for all test: the wear prozess is not linear so you got cross influences from the testing order.
      Version 2, same kind of engine, but different engine: You probably got more influences from the different production qualities of the engines than the fuels.
      So just do it right and use the average of a minimum of three engines for each fuel, or just stop publishing useless research papers!

    • @jcat96
      @jcat96 Před 5 lety

      I didn't look at the study directly, but when I googled "2.3L 4 cylinder 1981" it pointed me to the Ford "Lima" engine. It was carbeurated until 1984.

  • @darkbyte2005
    @darkbyte2005 Před 2 lety +1

    Its 2021 and the UK is going from E5 to E10, this video has so much good info..

  • @B0ZA92
    @B0ZA92 Před 4 lety +2

    Nice video, also you could have mentioned influence of ethanol on rubber seales in engine and fuel system. Is there a test where is compared wear on naturally aspirated engine vs turbo engine with same power output?

  • @ranger4972
    @ranger4972 Před 2 lety +5

    I'm surprised it's not brought up more but a notable advantage of the ethanol blend is that it lowers the freezing point of the water that gets mixed up in the fuel (believe me, it's in there) so it helps make sure you don't freeze your fuel lines in the winter (cold climate specific advantage). Winter fuel additives used to be a thing in Canada and I don't even see them sold in gas stations anymore now that E10 is the norm.

    • @ZealothPL
      @ZealothPL Před rokem

      Instead it will turn into physical obstructions that block orifices in carburetors making your rarely used engines require insane amounts of maintenance

    • @ranger4972
      @ranger4972 Před rokem +1

      @@ZealothPL who uses a carbureted engine for anything now ?

    • @PigeonSpeaks
      @PigeonSpeaks Před 11 měsíci

      @@ranger4972 they're pretty common in used motorcycles that rarely get ridden and require insane amount of maintenance thanks to ethanol fuels fouling up their carburetors.

    • @edblevins681
      @edblevins681 Před 4 měsíci

      Evidently you don't mow your lawn or use a snow blower

    • @ranger4972
      @ranger4972 Před 4 měsíci

      @@edblevins681 I live in the city. I have a shovel, snow tires and an electric mower.

  • @EnthusiastsGarage
    @EnthusiastsGarage Před 5 lety +24

    If you fill something with E10 that is used on a regular basis it’s no big deal. It’s the things that are used sparingly like collector cars and small equipment (especially 2 cycle) that gets wrecked when the ethanol breaks down and attracts moisture into the fuel system and it gets a big gulp of water when you start it.

    • @steveskouson9620
      @steveskouson9620 Před 5 lety

      The issue with 2 strokes and E10, is a weird one.
      If you premix, which most of us do, you have a
      mixture of 3 things, oil, ethanol, and gasoline.
      Now, let's add water. Almost instantly, we get
      a phase shift, the oil and gas will separate out
      from the water and alcohol. BOTH will run the
      engine, but only one will provide lubrication.
      steve

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Před 5 lety +3

      If the Ethyl alcohol in the petroleum blend, "absorbs" water from humid air, then that absorbed water will burn as it becomes tempered alcohol. Like 80proof booze vs 60proof. Both still will get you there, but 60proof or "Scotch and Water" will take you longer than straight Scotch at the same volume. I used to have a lot more problems on Mobile Bay with a lawnmower and pure gasoline. Mow and put it up on 1/4 tank, humidity gets in, condenses, gasoline isolates it to a bottom layer, damned thing won't start next week.
      So Ethanol that has not already been saturated with water, will mix with humidity better than gasoline. If your tank is vented and gravity fed (small motorcycle or mower) then the rule is keep it full till end of season then store it completely dry. If you have a petcock then it is easy to drain through the reserve setting.
      If humidity gets into your tank above the fill line, it will condense when the temperature drops. Thus you notice water in your fuel in the hot day, cool nights months. Physics and chemistry, vs anecdotal guessing.

    • @turboseize
      @turboseize Před 5 lety +3

      Obvious solution: drive your collector car more often! :-)

    • @FrankGutowski-ls8jt
      @FrankGutowski-ls8jt Před 5 lety +1

      Enthusiasts Garage
      Ethanol does not break down. Ever see a bottle of 25 yr old Scotch? Ethanol does not attract more water to a fuel tank than pure gasoline. It dissolves more water because it is both hydrophilic and soluble in gasoline.

    • @FrankGutowski-ls8jt
      @FrankGutowski-ls8jt Před 5 lety

      Muskoka Mike
      Too bad you deleted the FYI about alcohol vs ethanol. You must have confused one name with methanol or possibly denatured alcohol. Anyway, don’t quit your day job. You’re no chemist.
      I have a 25 year old bottle of Southern Comfort with a pour spout. None has evaporated. Alcohol does not decompose by oxidization or polymerization in the presence of oxygen.

  • @mrthunderbird5
    @mrthunderbird5 Před 4 lety

    Thank you 🙏 for that information 👏 👍

  • @ilovetotri23
    @ilovetotri23 Před 2 lety

    Super interesting! Thanks.

  • @mattr9266
    @mattr9266 Před 5 lety +4

    It would be interesting to see the test results today with a modern synthetic motor oil. Newer oils will handle the ethanol/methanol better and not break down as easily.

  • @SunnyKim_
    @SunnyKim_ Před 5 lety +7

    Ive never really worried about engine wear. I just think it burns out O2 sensors faster, thats what I want to know.

  • @chrispicquet733
    @chrispicquet733 Před 2 lety +1

    Very informative! But my main problem with E10 fuel is the damage it causes to carbs,rubber,plastic components.dont forget the short shelf life it has(2 months).after that it starts converting into a varnish that ruins carburetors.

  • @laochek
    @laochek Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the informative video. As always enjoyed all your videos. What about methanol injection? Will the amounts of methanol be big enough to cause wear and oil dilution?

  • @eurogryphon
    @eurogryphon Před 5 lety +3

    I own a carbureted 2007 motorcycle, and I noticed that I get 10-15% lower fuel economy when using ethanol fuel vs. regular gasoline.
    Something I’ve read about in motorcycle magazines and online reviews is that ethanol fuel is highly corrosive to the rubber fuel lines on motorcycles. Should this concern me for either my 2007 Honda or my 2016 Victory?

    • @OspreyKnight
      @OspreyKnight Před 5 lety +2

      honestly, car and motorcycle manufacturers have been designing around ethanol since the 90s. Your fuel lines should be made to withstand ethanol, and if they aren't you just need to replace them with ones that do. It's like a dollar fix, and a couple hours under the hood/tank. My 97 4runner does just fine with enthanol, and I get roughly 21mpg when going 60-70. I can push it to 25mpg if I go 40-50mph. The manufacturer rates my vehicle at 22mpg highway. Really, it's more about how you drive and what you haul as far as fuel efficiency.

  • @jamesoren7238
    @jamesoren7238 Před 5 lety +6

    Great video as always, but honestly I thought we'd put this to bed years ago; even the people who say it'll damage the car are usually talking about fuel hoeses and pumps and such. But yeah, modern cars like 99% on the road are fine, which is why they can sell it everywhere.
    What I'd really like is an environment impact vid of E10, because seemingly even governments can't agree on whether the real world impact of E10 is lower or higher pollution and "bad" emissions - some say that because the E10 emits less CO2 total emissions are cleaner, others that that's offset by the lower fuel economy and people seem to quote different examples of how switching to ethanol fuels in a region either improved or worsened emissions there. In fact there's so much politics behind it it's pretty hard to google a definitive.

  • @thomaswoolsey6670
    @thomaswoolsey6670 Před 3 lety

    Excellent video, thank you

  • @aloysiusbelisarius9992
    @aloysiusbelisarius9992 Před 2 lety +1

    Very informative, this! I find it quite interesting that ethanol does not cause any noticeably adverse effects on the internals of a car engine, and this is from the established research of 1981. I remember a lot of scare-stories involving gasohol back in the day, and I was expecting to see the same thing with the mandatory reinstatement of gasohol. But it is good to know that gasohol will not actually cause any noticeable damage to an engine's innards (well, unless the -hol is METHanol, that is). Of course, then that begs the questions about overall energy efficiency and any adverse effects on the fuel-delivery systems, and this video does confirm those concerns: Ethanol does not produce the same BTUs gasoline does (ergo, from an energy-output perspective, less efficient as a fuel), and its alcohol nature can corrode carburetors.
    So, bottom line for me is, I am actually doing my car (which is as old as I am) a service overall by identifying and utilizing pure-gasoline outlets...but in a pinch, using occasional gasohol will not strand me.

  • @garnetcampbell4389
    @garnetcampbell4389 Před 5 lety +30

    I wished they measured the amount of fuel used during the 20 hour run.

    • @martintaper7997
      @martintaper7997 Před 4 lety

      There are different grades of some of the fuels so not easy.

    • @Taydrum
      @Taydrum Před 4 lety

      alcohols would use 15-30% more fuel than E10 or E0

    • @sezerinan3352
      @sezerinan3352 Před 3 lety +2

      Ethanol%34 more using than Gasoline, Methanol %120

  • @illernpiller
    @illernpiller Před 5 lety +31

    Seems they didn't check the gaskets, which can dry out from to much ethanol if your car is not made for it.

    • @redryder6987
      @redryder6987 Před 5 lety +15

      The problem with ethanol doesnt lie in the engine block.... it lies with the fuel system and any rubber/man made material it comes into contact with. Additionally, I dont think we should be using fossil fuels to process millions of bushels of corn into inefficient fuel...... One would be better off feeding the rest of the world with the corn surplus and just go with gasoline. The same goes for using electric vehicles, there is absolutely no point in using an EV that get's it's power from a grid that is, for the most part, powered by coal. You are outsourcing pollution, and you are outsourcing it to a more inefficient source than you would if it were from gasoline. You also then have to factor in transmission losses.... conversion losses from heat to mechanical to electrical..... losses in charging... losses in converting all of that back into electricity and mechanical energy..... Its just a waste of time, never mind the poor chinese slaves who mine all that explosive lithium for you with polluting machinery who then ship it on cargo ships that run on diesel.

    • @soraaoixxthebluesky
      @soraaoixxthebluesky Před 5 lety +3

      RedRyder That’s I find it funny when people thought electric is going to be the future lol

    • @BlackhawkPilot
      @BlackhawkPilot Před 5 lety +1

      Not the focus of the study.

  • @Bovrinox
    @Bovrinox Před 2 lety +1

    Quite an interesting set of data. Here in the UK we have just transitioned over to E10, unless you buy premium fuel which is still E5.
    reason I'm looking into this is because I run old vehicles, not sure my old Landy or my Sunbeam Rapier is gonna like it

  • @mikeirwin5162
    @mikeirwin5162 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely right I enjoy watching you you're very smart young matches that's good work

  • @willyck948
    @willyck948 Před 5 lety +3

    I'm a small engine technician (had many engines aparts over the years) I have noticed engines run on ethanol blend fuel have thicker build up of carbon than engines that haven't been run on ethanol blend fuel.
    Carbon is sticking to the piston crowns badly at least on the air cooled carberated engines witch can causing issues overtime.
    I have older flat head engine maintenance manuals saying to pull the head of and clean out the carbon build up. (around every 200 hours)
    That being said nobody does that and the prossess is made more difficult with introduction of OHV heads so I suggest running a cleaner threw small engines (around 200 hours) to prevent excessive carbon build up😉

    • @ayandas874
      @ayandas874 Před 5 lety

      Willy Cooke That is because you forgot to tune your car to ethanol usage. We use a electronic injector instead of carburettor though, so it allows for engine tuning.

  • @juupajaapa6952
    @juupajaapa6952 Před 5 lety +7

    I wish there was a similar study comparing natural gas (CNG) and gasoline.

  • @SaraK_69
    @SaraK_69 Před 4 lety

    great video and highly educational! Can you do you about E15 gas? It's coming out like wildfire in the Midwest and the debates are raging harder than ever! The public needs Facts!

  • @kevthedynamo
    @kevthedynamo Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this video. In the UK, we have just been converted to E10 now.

  • @thefilmguy
    @thefilmguy Před 5 lety +20

    I have a 1991 Nissan Hardbody pickup and I noticed that running E10 I would get 17 mpg city, but if I ran E0 (100% gasoline) I get 20mpg city. Which is in line with EPA estimates for the year. Highway mileage experienced a similar drop in mpg.
    The worst thing you can do with an older vehicle that has E10 in it is not drive it often.

    • @knight0334
      @knight0334 Před 5 lety +2

      I saw a similar fuel economy loss in my 2004 Dodge Caravan, 2005 Navigator, and 2004 Hyundai XG350L. E10 was consistently 3mpg less than straight unleaded.

    • @slamdvw
      @slamdvw Před 5 lety +2

      which would be in line with the lower BTU ratings of the fuels. Lower BTU - lower energy - have to burn more to make the same horsepower.

    • @rgrigio
      @rgrigio Před 5 lety +2

      That is correct as Ethanol has less energy density per liter/Kg when compared to gasoline.

    • @trainsbangsandautomobiles824
      @trainsbangsandautomobiles824 Před 5 lety +2

      Yep, I only use non-ethanol in my 93 Honda. It cost a bit more, but the MPG makes it more than worth the slightly extra costs. Not to mention being better on the 25yo fuel system that was never designed for ethanol

    • @HuyNguyen-cy6iu
      @HuyNguyen-cy6iu Před 5 lety

      My results are similar, about 10% worse fuel economy with E10 compared to 100% gasoline. So that would mean the 10% ethanol in the blend produces ZERO energy, while the 90% gasoline produces all of the energy.

  • @Artyomthewalrus
    @Artyomthewalrus Před 2 lety +4

    It is true that it's fine for cars. You did mention the main issue, but kind of brushed by it.
    Ethanol is very bad for small engines. It's fine to run them with an ethanol blend, but due to the nature of how many small engines are used, they often sit for a decent amount of time without use. The absorption of water and separation is pretty harmful for small engines.
    I have never met a company that chooses to use ethanol mix gas for chainsaws and similar equipment. Gas without is often 30% more expensive, but it's judged that the reduced maintenance issues from buying ethanol free makes that cost worth it (buying more new saws, and putting more repairs into already owned saws adds up). The only companies I am aware of that use ethanol mix are extremely unprofessional in other regards as well
    I ain't no scientist, but this is the general industry consensus. It's more economical to buy premium gasoline for small engines, vs buying ethanol mix and spending more on repairs and replacement.

  • @bebobism
    @bebobism Před 2 lety +1

    Also the 'best use before ' date for E10 is 3 months and E5 6months.
    If you want to keep it for longer you'll have to seal the fuel container airtight and preferably use a conserving additive.

  • @Valdismith
    @Valdismith Před 4 lety

    Very nice video from you again. I mean look, nowadays you can find anything online, but for example this study is berries who knows where, and you used their fruits of labor, but you explain it very well to people who do not know that much about cars, and thanks to you we now have that study detailed info from all the tests in a CZcams video.

  • @veteq101
    @veteq101 Před 5 lety +64

    Great video, let's not forget what Ethanol does to rubber hoses and full-tanks on bikes. I only run ethanol free gas in my cars and bikes.

    • @eksine
      @eksine Před 5 lety +3

      Where do you buy pure gasoline?

    • @slamdvw
      @slamdvw Před 5 lety +6

      Some stations advertise it ( at least in my area ). Around here, the 91 octane is *sometimes* pure gas, other stations its the 85 - so you have to read the pump.

    • @nauthizzz
      @nauthizzz Před 5 lety +2

      In my neck of the woods it's advertised as "recreational fuel", intended for small engine vehicles and marine use. I use it in my lawn equipment as it is supposed to help keep the small carb bits from getting clogged with gunk.

    • @ozstriker1984
      @ozstriker1984 Před 5 lety

      What?

    • @BensCoffeeRants
      @BensCoffeeRants Před 5 lety +1

      You probably shouldn't be sniffing gas.

  • @kellyschlumberger1030
    @kellyschlumberger1030 Před 5 lety +3

    What about the seals, like gaskets and rubber?

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před 4 lety

      There should be no rubber in an engine built after the mid 1970s.

  • @Jonatha8a12
    @Jonatha8a12 Před 3 lety

    Awesome video!

  • @Brad-k
    @Brad-k Před 4 lety +1

    Great info @Engineering Explained... thank you , I'm going to pop some husky 94 octane plus 10% ethanol blend in my Turbo Sportage and will see how she likes it.

    • @gejbifrank4575
      @gejbifrank4575 Před 3 lety

      Pretty sure the Husky 94 already has ethanol in it, doesn’t it?

  • @handyman7748
    @handyman7748 Před 4 lety +51

    you forgot to mention what alcohol does to seals, including the ones in your fuel injectors. the only reason alcohol is being forced on us is because of corn farm lobbyists in D.C.

    • @ItsMe-my7sz
      @ItsMe-my7sz Před 4 lety +5

      ....well in Germany the left forced it onto us for environmental reasons.... at least we can decide between E5 and E10

    • @joey-cv9uw
      @joey-cv9uw Před 4 lety +5

      I would rather my money go to our farmers that super rich big oil lady's and gentlemen

    • @jalderink
      @jalderink Před 4 lety +2

      @@joey-cv9uw Farms are almost all corporate these days and food will always sell, you don't need to make other products from it. Especially since corn is not as good as other plants for making fuel.

    • @travld2
      @travld2 Před 4 lety +2

      Yes ethanol is a huge scam!!!!!

  • @eclipsekcb9201
    @eclipsekcb9201 Před 5 lety +7

    Now show what it does to the fuel system itself. Had a 1978 Ford F150 around the time that they started using E10 and it never ran as good after. I've read of boats having to have their entire fuel systems replaced due to ethanol damage.

    • @huntsbychainsaw5986
      @huntsbychainsaw5986 Před 4 lety

      Start running high test or using fuel additives. Your truck will never run right on e10 without some significant reworking in the engine and fuel systems

  • @BlackhawkPilot
    @BlackhawkPilot Před 5 lety

    E10 and E15 also prevent detonation (pinging) in older cars. I drive a 1964 Rover 2000 TC that stock is 11:1 compression ratio. When unleaded fuels were first mandated (1970s) even the highest octane rated fuels pinged until I found one station in my area that had E20 and that did the trick.

  • @elelegidosf9707
    @elelegidosf9707 Před 2 lety

    Very useful information

  • @dielauwen
    @dielauwen Před 5 lety +9

    The US Navy once said a a ethanol gasoline blend was ideal ,then recanted when the separation problems came up. Way before 1980 . But a 20 hour test is not realistic. Take a 1,000 hour test with periods of cooldow to full temperature and load and get a real indication of wear in the bottom end as well as the top cylinder area. CAT says Moo.

    • @kalloggs40
      @kalloggs40 Před 4 lety +1

      There was a test on youtube not sure if I can find it, 400,000 kms on E10, it was a 4wd, nothing beyond normal wear, and the engine was superclean, they opened it on the video. If I find it I will link it.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před 4 lety

      You can get around these problems by using wider fuel lines. Same solution works for bio-deasel at low temperatures.

  • @Strange_92
    @Strange_92 Před 5 lety +3

    Here in Finland we have E10, E5 and E85. I always put E5 in my car, costs more but better fuel economy.

    • @THe9-3MAnIaC
      @THe9-3MAnIaC Před 3 lety

      I want E10 in sweden, because a bit cleaner engines better for the environment, and probably a little bit more power

  • @krishall3187
    @krishall3187 Před 4 lety

    Great video!

  • @Everything-hilarious
    @Everything-hilarious Před 2 lety

    Great explanation. Would you be able to do a video on how flex fuel works and how you can benefit from power gains as a lot of people are using flex fuel kits including the effect it has on pulling timing. as well methanol injection used to cool the intake rather then as a fuel and how you can benefit from both used in conjunction as I see them both used together alot with alot
    Of great gains on turbo direct injection cars
    Thanks love your videos

  • @TheIrongutz
    @TheIrongutz Před 4 lety +9

    When I purchase gasoline I want gasoline not filler. If I wanted ethanol I should be getting a price reduction on sub par fuel. Think about it, the fuel refiners are making a killing on these blended fuels selling them as gasoline, it has nothing to do with the environment but their bottom lines.

    • @lashlarue7924
      @lashlarue7924 Před 4 lety +1

      Blame the corn lobby. An unholy union of hippy environmentalists and corn states with 2 senators each. There you go.

    • @carlosoliveira-rc2xt
      @carlosoliveira-rc2xt Před 3 lety

      @@lashlarue7924 Never mind that making ethanol from corn is not really saving the environment.

  • @MustangGuru
    @MustangGuru Před 5 lety +5

    Do a complete break down of the chemicals in gasoline. Winter and summer blends.

  • @FlatPlaneCranky
    @FlatPlaneCranky Před 4 lety

    Great information Sir! I own and daily drive a 1993 Chevy pickup and all I have access to is 10% ethanol fuels. Is there a product that can neutralize ethanol side effects on my old fuel system? I currently run Lucas UCL every fill up but I don’t know if it’s a fighter against ethanol side effects???

  • @ulrich7819
    @ulrich7819 Před 2 lety

    Thanks good show !