Originally posted by: Sawyer
I just noticed this at a place I normally get gas, on the 87 and and premium there is a sticker that says it could contain 10% eth. Will this cause any mpg issues with a normal car(2001 Focus)?
Originally posted by: Billb2
The theory is that what you loose in mileage, you get back in lower cost for the gas.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
On average, I have gotten 10% lower mpg in every vehicle I've ever compared 89 octane E-10 versus regular 87 octane.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
On average, I have gotten 10% lower mpg in every vehicle I've ever compared 89 octane E-10 versus regular 87 octane.
Originally posted by: thedarkwolf
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
On average, I have gotten 10% lower mpg in every vehicle I've ever compared 89 octane E-10 versus regular 87 octane.
BS If your car was able to run e85 you would only get around 20% less so I don't buy 10% less running e10. Maybe if you were running gas with 10% water in it.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: thedarkwolf
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
On average, I have gotten 10% lower mpg in every vehicle I've ever compared 89 octane E-10 versus regular 87 octane.
BS If your car was able to run e85 you would only get around 20% less so I don't buy 10% less running e10. Maybe if you were running gas with 10% water in it.
I don't care if you believe it or not, I've repeated the experiment a number of times.
Originally posted by: DonaldC
Originally posted by: Sawyer
I just noticed this at a place I normally get gas, on the 87 and and premium there is a sticker that says it could contain 10% eth. Will this cause any mpg issues with a normal car(2001 Focus)?
Ethanol has less energy than gasoline so you might see a drop in mpg.
Originally posted by: Bignate603
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: thedarkwolf
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
On average, I have gotten 10% lower mpg in every vehicle I've ever compared 89 octane E-10 versus regular 87 octane.
BS If your car was able to run e85 you would only get around 20% less so I don't buy 10% less running e10. Maybe if you were running gas with 10% water in it.
I don't care if you believe it or not, I've repeated the experiment a number of times.
That does seem very strange. What kind of car is this?
Originally posted by: IGBT
Originally posted by: DonaldC
Originally posted by: Sawyer
I just noticed this at a place I normally get gas, on the 87 and and premium there is a sticker that says it could contain 10% eth. Will this cause any mpg issues with a normal car(2001 Focus)?
Ethanol has less energy than gasoline so you might see a drop in mpg.
..I used to get near 20 mpg in my dodge dakota on the road. now I get 18 or less with the eth mix.
Originally posted by: Bignate603
I'm wondering how you did this experiment? Did you run the two fuels back to back in the same kind of weather?
I'm mentioning this because ethanol is put in during the summer, where the car is dealing with hotter weather (engines prefer cooler intake air) and also you're more likely to have your AC on which will bring down your mileage.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: Bignate603
I'm wondering how you did this experiment? Did you run the two fuels back to back in the same kind of weather?
I'm mentioning this because ethanol is put in during the summer, where the car is dealing with hotter weather (engines prefer cooler intake air) and also you're more likely to have your AC on which will bring down your mileage.
Yes. Be kind of pointless otherwise, wouldn't it?
AC usually causes 1mpg loss by itself. I've decided that's acceptable![]()
..I used to get near 20 mpg in my dodge dakota on the road. now I get 18 or less with the eth mix.
