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#61
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
Rusty Shakleford wrote:
I believe they are studying the financial viability more than the environmental issues. I am still for it, we need the fuel. We have plenty of State and Federally owned Forrest in Missouri. Never enough! I'll be in KC tomorrow night, arriving too late for the ballgame, however. Cheers, Alan -- -- r.p.e.35mm user resource: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- r.p.d.slr-systems: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpdslrsysur.htm -- [SI] gallery & rulz: http://www.pbase.com/shootin -- e-meil: Remove FreeLunch. |
#62
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
Jennifer wrote:
I live in a state where ethanol is produced. Nearly every gas station here is being FORCED into carrying it. It is garbage gas. If your car isn't made to use this type of fuel, don't use it. It will damage your fuel injectors. Don't use it in your lawn mower either thinking you'll save money, you'll damage your mower. It runs the engine too hot. They're selling us a bill of goods on this "gas". You'll get less gas mileage from it too. I'd rather convert my car into running on used fryer oil than put ethanol in my car anyday. 1) Government has to step in on massive scales to prime the pump for the greater good. This provides more jobs in your state and stable and increasing prices for corn for your farmers ... gets them off of subsidies. For that matter, farmers in your state are likely investing in those gas pumps and disterlies. 2) The air you and your childre breathe will be cleaner. 3) GM, Ford and Chrysler have delivered over 6 million cars rated for E85 (FFV or "Flexfuel"). Of course you have to be smart enough to read at least the owners manual; and smart enough to read the warning at the pump. 4) While you do get 10-15% less mileage, you also pay less for it. 5) Used fryer oil can be converted into diesel, not gasoline. So you'd still screw up your engine if you use the wrong fuel. 6) As you're a "newcomer" here, please let me laugh at your your pathetically weak trolling attempt. Ha ha. That felt good! Thanks. Cheers! Alan. -- -- r.p.e.35mm user resource: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- r.p.d.slr-systems: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpdslrsysur.htm -- [SI] gallery & rulz: http://www.pbase.com/shootin -- e-meil: Remove FreeLunch. |
#63
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
William Graham wrote:
"Alan Browne" wrote in message When you fraction steam, ethanol and the rest, the "rest" ends up in the runoff water at the bottom of the still. So the methanol can be separated from the water and burnt in the mash heater. You know an awful lot about this Alan.....Are you sure you're not from Tennessee? Quick study. |
#64
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
no_name wrote:
I've been wondering if anyone has compared E-85 with using the same corn to make corn oil and using it in a bio-diesel? I know the original diesel design was created to burn peanut oil. When the ethanol makers ferment the mash they extract (before or after, I don't know) the corn oil. The left over mash (post fermentation and ethanol "cook off") is made into cattle/hog feed. IOW it's not one or the other, but both. The corn oil could be used for biodiesel, but is probably more valuable in food processing. The manure from the cattle and hogs can be processed into methane and or diesel (in the later case by some hydrogen process) and fertilizer. Which goes into the corn field. The corn when growing absorbs more CO2 than the engine emits ... ain't it nice. Cheers, Alan |
#65
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
no_name wrote:
Bill wrote: This may come as a shock to you, but most "gas stations" get their fuel from a transport truck hauling a tanker. But that tanker gets its load from a terminal that's filled from a pipeline. You put the ethanol stills out there in farm country. Transport the corn to the crusher/fermenter/distellery, thence to the pumps within 50 - 100+ miles. Just like gasoline. -- -- r.p.e.35mm user resource: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- r.p.d.slr-systems: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpdslrsysur.htm -- [SI] gallery & rulz: http://www.pbase.com/shootin -- e-meil: Remove FreeLunch. |
#66
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
For those of you who wathced "60 minutes" I apologize. It sucked. 1) It was one sided. 2) It was "over the top". If you think I'm optimistic about this, the sole proponent they had was completely whacky. Could discredit the whole thing. 60 minutes sucks. I used to like that show. It's really gone downhill. Only bright light of the whole thing was the Brazil segment. 40% and growing conversion to ethanol. Price is less than gasoline by a fair margine (possibly govenerment controlled, not stated). Cheers, Alan Alan Browne wrote: For the North American audience 60 Minutes will present a segement on E-85 (Ethanol) fuels, Sunday May 7 (19:00 EDT, CBS). I halfheartedly apologize for the OT posting, but you know how sensitive I am on this topic. E-85 is 85% ethanol. The vehicle must have a fuel mix sensor and controls. This is a growth trend area in North America which, while it doesn't reduce consumption, it at least displaces it with a renewable fuel that burns cleaner than gasoline. Cheers, Alan -- -- r.p.e.35mm user resource: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- r.p.d.slr-systems: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpdslrsysur.htm -- [SI] gallery & rulz: http://www.pbase.com/shootin -- e-meil: Remove FreeLunch. |
#67
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E-85
no_name wrote:
Don't know if diesel engines will run E-85. Nope. No more than they will gasoline. |
#68
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E-85
Bill Funk wrote:
On Sun, 07 May 2006 16:45:22 -0400, Alan Browne wrote: Bill Funk wrote: On 6 May 2006 11:46:42 -0700, "Rich" wrote: It's so clean it scours the inside of the engine, causing drastically increased part's wear. Of for the days of tetraethyl lead. Vehicles designed for E-85 use don't have this problem. Why? Because they are designed for E-85. You'd be much better off complaining about E-85's real problems. Which are what? Several... Higher cost; where E-85 is on the market, it costs more than gas. Higher cost; it's costlier than gas *WITH* more than 50¢ per gallon direct tax credit (meaning the makers of E-85 get more than 50¢ off their federal taxes for each gallon of ethanol they make, which is directly paid by taxpayers). Er, various sources show it as cheaper than gas. See my other post showing that gasoline gets at least 12 cents subsidy, but more like 96 (yes 96) cents subsidy if cost of defending the oil is accounted for. Lower energy than gas (meaning: it costs more at the pump, and users get fewer MPG, for a cost double whammy). Despite the lower efficiency, the net (with the lower price) is cheaper than gas. In Brazil this is clear (at the pump). Not sure what their subsidy is (if any). They have their own oil supplies offshore as well. E-85 releases more fumes than gas, making for more pollution. Which fumes? The corn grown absorbs more CO2 than ethanol generates. The continental US can't raise sugar cane (which Brasil, often cited as an example the US should follow, uses), which is far more efficient than corn as a source for ethanol. The ratio of energy in/out for ethanol, under current technology, is about 1:1.25 *at best*; this means we gain little in actual energy efficiency. Unlike gasoline ethanol is renewable. After three cycles you're at par, on the 4th cycle you're ahead of whatever oil can ever deliver. The ratio is 1:1.38 (BTW). The current move to get away from oil for motor fuel is mostly fueled (pardon the pun) by a desire to cut energuy costs; E-85 does the opposite, something that is definitely not being told to the public. As well, it's seldom mentioned that E-85 requires an expensive vehicle conversion (or purchase of a new vehicle), further raising costs. Nope: Ford, GM and Chrysler sell these at the same price as the non FFV vehicles. (In the beginning there was as much as $2000 difference; now most of the them are the same price at buy time). This was also mentioned on 60 minutes last night and on the doe site you can find which vehicles carry a premium and which do not. Most do not. Over 6 M vehicles delivered in the US so far from Ford, GM and Chrysler. While it's possible to push E-85 as a way to cut oil imports, it's *cost* that will hit the average buyer, and E-85 fails in the cost department. Wrong. At worst is close to par. And as production increased, economies of scale will continue to reduce the cost. Cheers, Alan |
#69
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[OT - US/Canada] E-85
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:02:52 -0400, Alan Browne
said... Jennifer wrote: I live in a state where ethanol is produced. Nearly every gas station here is being FORCED into carrying it. It is garbage gas. If your car isn't made to use this type of fuel, don't use it. It will damage your fuel injectors. Don't use it in your lawn mower either thinking you'll save money, you'll damage your mower. It runs the engine too hot. They're selling us a bill of goods on this "gas". You'll get less gas mileage from it too. I'd rather convert my car into running on used fryer oil than put ethanol in my car anyday. 1) Government has to step in on massive scales to prime the pump for the greater good. This provides more jobs in your state and stable and increasing prices for corn for your farmers ... gets them off of subsidies. For that matter, farmers in your state are likely investing in those gas pumps and disterlies. 2) The air you and your childre breathe will be cleaner. No it won't. Ethanol will actually cause more air pollution. 3) GM, Ford and Chrysler have delivered over 6 million cars rated for E85 (FFV or "Flexfuel"). Of course you have to be smart enough to read at least the owners manual; and smart enough to read the warning at the pump. 4) While you do get 10-15% less mileage, you also pay less for it. Try 25-30% less mileage (the Energy Dept. estimates 40% less mileage). Recent reports cite ethanol prices being more expensive than gasoline, but even if ethanol were selling for a cheaper price than gas it's still more expensive when you figure in the tremendous drop in fuel efficiency. Read this: http://www.businessweek.com/autos/co...427_493909.htm Joe |
#70
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E-85
"no_name" wrote in message ... wrote: it must be _trucked_ to its destination Isn't all gas trucked to its destination? And if the trucks use the same fuel... Most petrochemicals are piped throughout North America to regional distribution centers. Trucked from there. Don't know if diesel engines will run E-85. No, but they will run on old used McDonald's French fry grease.....And that is also independent of the Middle East Oil Cartel......... |
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