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Converting to E85??

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  • #16
    I just was curious about it. Since I didnt know much about it I wanted to hear some more educated truth's about converting and whether or not it is worth it.
    - 2012 Mustang GT 5.0 - M6 / Brembo Package / 3.73 / Bama Tune / Catless X / Corsa Xtreme /
    - 2006 TBSS 2wd - Nitrous Grind Cam / Stainless Works LT's / Nitrous Works / FMStune / IeatSRT CAI / Stg 6 Trans / Kbee Coilovers / SOLD
    - 1997 Camaro - Crane 234 242 / PortedPolishedMilled / Kooks / Borla / CompClutch / pro5.0 / 4.10's / SLP / SOLD
    - 2008 G8 GT - Kooks / Vararam / HSRK / FMStune / SOLD
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    • #17
      Not worth it in an NA street motor. Forced induction, N20 or even a high compression NA application would greatly benefit from it. Its basically pump race fuel.


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      • #18
        Not a huge fan of e85. A quality race fuel makes more power and is much more consistent. All the Evo and Sti ricers think that they are hot shit for running it

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        • #19
          Originally posted by ThreeHonks View Post
          Not a huge fan of e85. A quality race fuel makes more power and is much more consistent. All the Evo and Sti ricers think that they are hot shit for running it
          There is a reason there is a push for E85 in heads up classes that only allow Gasoline...

          Who wants to pay $8 a gallon for fuel when you can make damn near the same power on a more readily available fuel that costs $3 a gallon...

          I'm not saying that E85 is better than gasoline but you cant discount its advantages in a street car.
          Last edited by c0ncEpT; November 16th, 2011, 08:33 PM.


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          • #20
            Really the only thing I dislike is that you have to burn it at like (7.5:1-8.5-:1) air fuel ratio. It just gets burned like its going out of style especially in a boosted car. Just impossible to get any milage out of it.
            99ws6 - Huron Speed Turbo - PT67

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            • #21
              Consistency is the biggest issue. If you are serious about running E85 you'll want to buy it 55 gallons @ a time or use a computer that is "flex fuel" aware.

              My uncle runs it in his so called race car - and I just have to laugh at him. He buys it 10 gallons at a time, doesn't have a tester or wideband and is always having to change the jets in his carb, trying to get the car to run consistent.
              2000 Formula
              fixed slow junk

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              • #22
                That scares me too especially under high boost. The octane can vary quite a bit I would hate to get a low batch on a high boost run.
                99ws6 - Huron Speed Turbo - PT67

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by c0ncEpT View Post
                  There is a reason there is a push for E85 in heads up classes that only allow Gasoline...

                  Who wants to pay $8 a gallon for fuel when you can make damn near the same power on a more readily available fuel that costs $3 a gallon...

                  I'm not saying that E85 is better than gasoline but you cant discount its advantages in a street car.
                  Cheap, fast, reliable. Pick 2. If you spend thousands on a nice engine/turbo setup and don't want to run race fuel due to the price, you deserve to have your shit blow up or just be slow.

                  I can justify it for a bolt on evo or something but nothing making some type of serious power

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                  • #24
                    Just bumped into this.

                    Near the bottom they mention E85 wanting plugs three steps colder


                    http://www.carcraft.com/howto/116_07...e/viewall.html



                    FYI

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                    • #25
                      seems crazy to run a 8 on a stockish motor with E85.
                      Doing less with more


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                      • #26
                        Just passing info along, but your probably right, and e85 is probably not worth it anyway on a stock motor.



                        For those not stock though....

                        Doesnt anybody know the output of our coils?

                        I was reading on yellowbullet from a guy making 1200/1300hp N/A on E85/E98 that when he switched to E85/E98, he had to upgrade his ignition system, for it to support itself...

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                        • #27
                          Just noticed this post and figured I'd chime in since I'm running E85 in my Firebird. I agree that it's not worth the hassle to switch unless you have a good reason to do so. For me, I run a carburated 13.8-1 comp. NA smallblock on the street. The change for me was strictly for economy reasons. Even if I do use 30% more fuel, that is still less than half the price of the race fuel that I would otherwise have to use. I have seen absolutely no batch issue problems. I have had ZERO tuning problems after at least 20 fillups. But I only run my car in the summer. The batch problem comes when the weather gets cold any they switch the mix from E85% to E70%.

                          The alcohol also works great to keep the car cool, and against detonation. After a full summer of driving and racing the engine oil and plugs still look like the day that I put them in. Completely spotless. Tuning can be a ***** because the plugs stay so clean that it is almost impossible to read anything on them. An Inovate wide band was a big help in carb tuning.

                          For me it's been great!

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