10% Ethanol, Heads Up!

   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #111  
A moderator in the fight...I like it.:thumbsup:

Being a moderator has nothing to do with the discussion. As a moderator, my duties are to move misplaced threads, delete spam and spammers and remove unsavory language... non of which has happened in this discussion as of yet. :)
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #112  
Being a moderator has nothing to do with the discussion. As a moderator, my duties are to move misplaced threads, delete spam and spammers and remove unsavory language... non of which has happened in this discussion as of yet. :)

I know...I still like it though.:cool:
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #113  
I'm not sure how long we've had the ethanol in our gas, and I wouldn't know where to get any as without ethanol, but I, too, have had no problems at all so far (knock on wood).:)

Just try finding gasoline without ethanol these days, impossible.
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #114  
If we would burn the corn to heat our homes we could burn the natural gas in our cars. That would maximize the BTUs in the corn and and lessen our use of foreign oil. The U.S. has ample supplies of natural gas and corn. We just need to use them in the most efficient ways.


I really favor feeding corn not burning it in any way. But I appreciate you
seeing the sense in using our natural gas resources wisely.

IMHO, that is the greatest tragedy of the current political situation, that we have not seized the opportunities put in front of us with our natural gas resources.

Charlie Munger with Berkshire Hathaway said that if you have the energy you can solve a lot of problems. Well, we have the energy but we've been stuck in mud and haven't solved many problems.
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #115  
If we would burn the corn to heat our homes we could burn the natural gas in our cars. That would maximize the BTUs in the corn and and lessen our use of foreign oil. The U.S. has ample supplies of natural gas and corn. We just need to use them in the most efficient ways.

I do agree with that. I was burning corn for about 4 years, then price of corn went up. I burned wood and ran propane for the last couple, but am switching back to corn with propane this winter.
Another thing I would like to see is methane hydrates being researched for collecting. If we were to take as proof of a documentary I seen (think PBS) the methane hydrates at the bottom of the ocean would power the world at current energy demand for 2000 years. If some one else has heard this, I hope they chime in on this too.
The collection process seems to be the problem. As we even seen with the gulf leak disaster, it can be a real problem to get up for plugging.
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #116  
Yeah,,here you,,I've been buying highest test,,and putting marine stable in weed eaters/chain saws/lawnmowers,,,not having much problems now,,,[yet again],,try that,,,might help....

Same here. I bought a new chainsaw last year and was advised to use highest test available and mix with marine sta-bil. I do this for all the gas that goes in the string trimmer, chainsaw, and lawn tractor. The ethanol is a solvent, and older machines may still have adverse reactions to it. Also, you might need to keep on top of any inline fuel filters, as they can collect the water which bonds with the ethanol and separates from the gas.
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #117  
Good analogy but, remember the best part of the corn is going back to DDG for feed value to cattle. Last I remember on the petroleum side, it takes lots of energy also to make it in the fuel tank.

Skyco, Iowa being one of the big producers of ethanol, does have the choice for ethanol laced or regular gas.:thumbsup:

Yes. The feed is produced as a byproduct of the corn to ethanol process. So is carbon dioxide, which they capture and put into soda pop (as well as other uses). There is a U.S. Carbonic (I think that is the name) plant right next door to the ethanol plant here is South Bend, In.

A couple things to think about...
If we are going to grow the corn for feed or fuel we cannot consider the energy needed to grow the corn because that is going to be the same either way.

If we feed the corn directly to the cattle, there is little BTU energy lost.
If we send it to an ethanol plant we lose BTUs while creating the ethanol and the feed and the industrial gases. There would be little energy lost if we just fed the cattle the raw corn. (I ain't a farmer, so can you feed cattle raw corn? I just don't know).

On the petroleum side, if we burned natural gas in our cars, there would be little BTU cost in making it usable in the cars, whereas there are costs and substantial BTU losses making oil into gasoline or diesel fuel.

Every time we convert something into another form we lose a ton of BTU energy in the conversion process.

Every time we eliminate a step of converting something, we save a ton of BTU energy. We should be looking at ways to burn things in their raw state instead of converting them for current technology.

Personally, I think we should be investing in nuclear plants and make all homes heat with electricity. If cars like the Chevy Volt pan out, we can drive around town on an electric charge and drive longer distances on natural gas. We could all eat grain fed beef and sell the U.S. oil to China! ;)
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #118  
Yes. The feed is produced as a byproduct of the corn to ethanol process. So is carbon dioxide, which they capture and put into soda pop (as well as other uses). There is a U.S. Carbonic (I think that is the name) plant right next door to the ethanol plant here is South Bend, In.

A couple things to think about...
If we are going to grow the corn for feed or fuel we cannot consider the energy needed to grow the corn because that is going to be the same either way.

If we feed the corn directly to the cattle, there is little BTU energy lost.
If we send it to an ethanol plant we lose BTUs while creating the ethanol and the feed and the industrial gases. There would be little energy lost if we just fed the cattle the raw corn. (I ain't a farmer, so can you feed cattle raw corn? I just don't know).

On the petroleum side, if we burned natural gas in our cars, there would be little BTU cost in making it usable in the cars, whereas there are costs and substantial BTU losses making oil into gasoline or diesel fuel.

Every time we convert something into another form we lose a ton of BTU energy in the conversion process.

Every time we eliminate a step of converting something, we save a ton of BTU energy. We should be looking at ways to burn things in their raw state instead of converting them for current technology.

Personally, I think we should be investing in nuclear plants and make all homes heat with electricity. If cars like the Chevy Volt pan out, we can drive around town on an electric charge and drive longer distances on natural gas. We could all eat grain fed beef and sell the U.S. oil to China! ;)


Yes cattle are fed raw corn. Usually milled but raw.

I think you are missing Murphy's point that cattle don't use all of the "BTU" in the corn. So to a certain extent ethanol can be made with no lost BTUs.

You compared the energy lost in ethanol to the use of NG. I am assuming that NG has to be converted or compressed to be used. How much energy is used to do that?

One advantage to ethanol that is seldom mentioned is the fact that you are converting non motor fuels like NG and coal into a motor fuel.
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #119  
...What's it worth to have 10% of our motor fuels produced domestically instead of in some unstable part of the world?

It might be worth something, if we actually gained a measure of fuel independence by burning E10. I know that's not the case for me. One of my cars gets 9% worse fuel mileage when burning E10 vs pure gas. The other at best gets 10% worse mileage with E10. I've checked this over multiple tanks of fuel in each car. Yes, the experiments are not 100% controlled, since the driving for each tank of gas may differ, but the results are that the E10 always results in about 9 or 10+% worse mileage in my cars.

A friend has kept very detailed records over an extended period of time for mileage in 3 different cars with E10 vs non-ethanol gas, and gets between 8 to 11% worse mileage with E10.

All of these cars were manufactured between 2002 and 2009, so have been manufactured long after E10 came on the scene nationally.

How is this helping us become more independent from mid-east oil? I might as well be buying 10% air.
 
   / 10% Ethanol, Heads Up! #120  
It might be worth something, if we actually gained a measure of fuel independence by burning E10. I know that's not the case for me. One of my cars gets 9% worse fuel mileage when burning E10 vs pure gas. The other at best gets 10% worse mileage with E10. I've checked this over multiple tanks of fuel in each car. Yes, the experiments are not 100% controlled, since the driving for each tank of gas may differ, but the results are that the E10 always results in about 9 or 10+% worse mileage in my cars.

A friend has kept very detailed records over an extended period of time for mileage in 3 different cars with E10 vs non-ethanol gas, and gets between 8 to 11% worse mileage with E10.

All of these cars were manufactured between 2002 and 2009, so have been manufactured long after E10 came on the scene nationally.

How is this helping us become more independent from mid-east oil? I might as well be buying 10% air.


John,

As in the individual experiences, perceptions, pre-conceived notions... regarding ethanol and small engine failures, it's certainly possible that one could experience such a reduction in fuel mileage with E10 but I'd suggest to you that these are on the margins.

Most reports that I've read on this and my own experience suggests that there's a small reduction in mileage with E10, perhaps in the 1.5% range but no greater than 3%.

Off the top of my head what your numbers suggest to me is that either there's zero energy content in ethanol, that it somehow inhibits the combustion of the gasoline content of the E10 formulate or that it in some other way is causing your engine to perform suboptimally. I know for a fact that the first two are just not the case.

Over the past year or so the Chinese car market has become the largest in the world. I'm sure India at some point in the not so distant future will be competing for that distinction. Such developments will only increase pressure on price and availability of our motor fuel supply here in the US. As I mentioned, Brazil's experience certainly suggests that ethanol is a viable alternative.
 

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