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Mixing alcohol with gasoline



 
 
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  #1  
Old May 27th 08, 11:50 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
[email protected]
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Posts: 472
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

Worth repeating. (Originally posted to the AirVW Group)

Alcohol in fuel

Alcohol has a lower BTU value than gasoline. Depending on how much
they are adding to your fuel, you are going to be seeing less power.

Alcohol is hygroscopic; it absorbs moisture and holds it in
suspension, further reducing the energy content of your fuel but also
exposing your fuel system to corrosion.

Alcohol weighs less than gasoline. The stoichiometric ratio of an
Otto Cycle engine is based on the MASS of fuel & air. If you have a
fuel-injected engine with an on-board combustion-control computer, the
system will adjust itself automatically and the only thing you'll
notice is that you must now buy/burn more fuel to travel the same
distance or do the same amount of work. If you are using a carburetor
you will have to re-size your jets to accommodate this lower-energy
fuel.

Depending on the type of alcohol being used to adulterate your fuel
(ie, methanol or ethanol), your fuel will now have a higher
endothermic ratio to achieve vaporization. With pure gasoline the
endotherm is about 90 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale; alcohol is
between 120 and 140. Given that alcohol is also hygroscopic, you will
have to re-size your carb & manifold heating arrangement to prevent
icing.

Alcohol has a higher octane rating than straight-run gasoline (about
120 vs 80). If alcohol is the only fuel you can afford (ie, as with
Brazil) then you can increase your engine's compression ratio to take
advantage of its higher octane. But this is not practical with an
engine originally designed to use unadulterated gasoline.

-----------------------------------------

Adding alcohol to gasoline is a TERRIBLE idea, especially for
aviation. Large corporations bribed our Congressmen to subsidize the
building & operation of the necessary distilleries to ensure a
built-in margin of profit. Since the average American is a virtual
idiot when it comes to technology, they simply told them alcohol was
'environmentally friendly' to sell this particular scam to the public.
In fact, mixing alcohol with gasoline is an environmental disaster
since we will now have to burn more fuel (and generate more pollution)
to do the same amount of work or travel. The subsidies amount to
about seventy cents per gallon of alcohol and are in fact a hidden tax
imposed on anyone forced to use this adulterated fuel.

-R.S.Hoover
  #2  
Old May 28th 08, 12:39 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
JohnO
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 120
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

On May 28, 10:50 am, " wrote:
Worth repeating. (Originally posted to the AirVW Group)

Alcohol in fuel

Alcohol has a lower BTU value than gasoline. Depending on how much
they are adding to your fuel, you are going to be seeing less power.

Alcohol is hygroscopic; it absorbs moisture and holds it in
suspension, further reducing the energy content of your fuel but also
exposing your fuel system to corrosion.

Alcohol weighs less than gasoline. The stoichiometric ratio of an
Otto Cycle engine is based on the MASS of fuel & air. If you have a
fuel-injected engine with an on-board combustion-control computer, the
system will adjust itself automatically and the only thing you'll
notice is that you must now buy/burn more fuel to travel the same
distance or do the same amount of work. If you are using a carburetor
you will have to re-size your jets to accommodate this lower-energy
fuel.

Depending on the type of alcohol being used to adulterate your fuel
(ie, methanol or ethanol), your fuel will now have a higher
endothermic ratio to achieve vaporization. With pure gasoline the
endotherm is about 90 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale; alcohol is
between 120 and 140. Given that alcohol is also hygroscopic, you will
have to re-size your carb & manifold heating arrangement to prevent
icing.

Alcohol has a higher octane rating than straight-run gasoline (about
120 vs 80). If alcohol is the only fuel you can afford (ie, as with
Brazil) then you can increase your engine's compression ratio to take
advantage of its higher octane. But this is not practical with an
engine originally designed to use unadulterated gasoline.

-----------------------------------------

Adding alcohol to gasoline is a TERRIBLE idea, especially for
aviation. Large corporations bribed our Congressmen to subsidize the
building & operation of the necessary distilleries to ensure a
built-in margin of profit. Since the average American is a virtual
idiot when it comes to technology, they simply told them alcohol was
'environmentally friendly' to sell this particular scam to the public.
In fact, mixing alcohol with gasoline is an environmental disaster
since we will now have to burn more fuel (and generate more pollution)
to do the same amount of work or travel. The subsidies amount to
about seventy cents per gallon of alcohol and are in fact a hidden tax
imposed on anyone forced to use this adulterated fuel.

-R.S.Hoover


And not only that, it makes your martini taste terrible.
  #3  
Old May 28th 08, 03:30 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 451
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

JohnO wrote:
On May 28, 10:50 am, " wrote:
Worth repeating. (Originally posted to the AirVW Group)

Alcohol in fuel

Alcohol has a lower BTU value than gasoline. Depending on how much
they are adding to your fuel, you are going to be seeing less power.

Alcohol is hygroscopic; it absorbs moisture and holds it in
suspension, further reducing the energy content of your fuel but also
exposing your fuel system to corrosion.

Alcohol weighs less than gasoline. The stoichiometric ratio of an
Otto Cycle engine is based on the MASS of fuel & air. If you have a
fuel-injected engine with an on-board combustion-control computer, the
system will adjust itself automatically and the only thing you'll
notice is that you must now buy/burn more fuel to travel the same
distance or do the same amount of work. If you are using a carburetor
you will have to re-size your jets to accommodate this lower-energy
fuel.

Depending on the type of alcohol being used to adulterate your fuel
(ie, methanol or ethanol), your fuel will now have a higher
endothermic ratio to achieve vaporization. With pure gasoline the
endotherm is about 90 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale; alcohol is
between 120 and 140. Given that alcohol is also hygroscopic, you will
have to re-size your carb & manifold heating arrangement to prevent
icing.

Alcohol has a higher octane rating than straight-run gasoline (about
120 vs 80). If alcohol is the only fuel you can afford (ie, as with
Brazil) then you can increase your engine's compression ratio to take
advantage of its higher octane. But this is not practical with an
engine originally designed to use unadulterated gasoline.

-----------------------------------------

Adding alcohol to gasoline is a TERRIBLE idea, especially for
aviation. Large corporations bribed our Congressmen to subsidize the
building & operation of the necessary distilleries to ensure a
built-in margin of profit. Since the average American is a virtual
idiot when it comes to technology, they simply told them alcohol was
'environmentally friendly' to sell this particular scam to the public.
In fact, mixing alcohol with gasoline is an environmental disaster
since we will now have to burn more fuel (and generate more pollution)
to do the same amount of work or travel. The subsidies amount to
about seventy cents per gallon of alcohol and are in fact a hidden tax
imposed on anyone forced to use this adulterated fuel.

-R.S.Hoover


And not only that, it makes your martini taste terrible.


Reminds me of the cotton gin. Who wants a fluffy martini?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
  #4  
Old May 28th 08, 04:34 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Stuart & Kathryn Fields
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 328
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline


wrote in message
...
Worth repeating. (Originally posted to the AirVW Group)

Alcohol in fuel

Alcohol has a lower BTU value than gasoline. Depending on how much
they are adding to your fuel, you are going to be seeing less power.

Alcohol is hygroscopic; it absorbs moisture and holds it in
suspension, further reducing the energy content of your fuel but also
exposing your fuel system to corrosion.

Alcohol weighs less than gasoline. The stoichiometric ratio of an
Otto Cycle engine is based on the MASS of fuel & air. If you have a
fuel-injected engine with an on-board combustion-control computer, the
system will adjust itself automatically and the only thing you'll
notice is that you must now buy/burn more fuel to travel the same
distance or do the same amount of work. If you are using a carburetor
you will have to re-size your jets to accommodate this lower-energy
fuel.

Depending on the type of alcohol being used to adulterate your fuel
(ie, methanol or ethanol), your fuel will now have a higher
endothermic ratio to achieve vaporization. With pure gasoline the
endotherm is about 90 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale; alcohol is
between 120 and 140. Given that alcohol is also hygroscopic, you will
have to re-size your carb & manifold heating arrangement to prevent
icing.

Alcohol has a higher octane rating than straight-run gasoline (about
120 vs 80). If alcohol is the only fuel you can afford (ie, as with
Brazil) then you can increase your engine's compression ratio to take
advantage of its higher octane. But this is not practical with an
engine originally designed to use unadulterated gasoline.

-----------------------------------------

Adding alcohol to gasoline is a TERRIBLE idea, especially for
aviation. Large corporations bribed our Congressmen to subsidize the
building & operation of the necessary distilleries to ensure a
built-in margin of profit. Since the average American is a virtual
idiot when it comes to technology, they simply told them alcohol was
'environmentally friendly' to sell this particular scam to the public.
In fact, mixing alcohol with gasoline is an environmental disaster
since we will now have to burn more fuel (and generate more pollution)
to do the same amount of work or travel. The subsidies amount to
about seventy cents per gallon of alcohol and are in fact a hidden tax
imposed on anyone forced to use this adulterated fuel.

-R.S.Hoover

We saw an experiment where an antiqu indicated horsepower device that was
used on locomotives was used and an antique hit and miss piston engine. The
indicated power gage plotted piston position vs pressure and the area under
the pv curve was power. With as little as 10% ethanol added the loss of
power was apparent. We also tried acetone, mek and some other octane
boosters. They all had the effect of reducing power.

Stu Fields


  #5  
Old June 9th 08, 02:58 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Darrel Toepfer
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 289
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

"Stuart & Kathryn Fields" wrote:

We also tried acetone,mek and some other octane boosters.
They all had the effect of reducing power.


MEK... Nearly $100 for 5 gallons... Ouch...
  #6  
Old June 9th 08, 05:10 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Sliker
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 26
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

On Tue, 27 May 2008 20:34:40 -0700, "Stuart & Kathryn Fields"
wrote:


We saw an experiment where an antiqu indicated horsepower device that was
used on locomotives was used and an antique hit and miss piston engine. The
indicated power gage plotted piston position vs pressure and the area under
the pv curve was power. With as little as 10% ethanol added the loss of
power was apparent. We also tried acetone, mek and some other octane
boosters. They all had the effect of reducing power.

Stu Fields


I would think the only time to use alcohol would be if avgas was no
longer available. At least then the higher compression engines that
can't run on premium auto fuel could still operate. But after all the
engine changes were made that are needed. And put up with the shorter
range with the same fuel tank capacity.

I know one thing you could have tried to get more power, instead of
reducing it. Nitro methane! but I'd hate to think what it would do to
the TBO of the engine. Probably about the same as a dragsters. One
race.
  #7  
Old June 10th 08, 12:24 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Blueskies
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 979
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline


"Sliker" wrote in message ...

I would think the only time to use alcohol would be if avgas was no
longer available. At least then the higher compression engines that
can't run on premium auto fuel could still operate. But after all the
engine changes were made that are needed. And put up with the shorter
range with the same fuel tank capacity.


What is the compression ratio for on of the Indy cars? They have been running alcohol for years. It is more an ignition
timing and material issue...

  #8  
Old July 6th 08, 08:25 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 75
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

On Mon, 09 Jun 2008 00:10:42 -0400, Sliker
wrote:

On Tue, 27 May 2008 20:34:40 -0700, "Stuart & Kathryn Fields"
wrote:


We saw an experiment where an antiqu indicated horsepower device that was
used on locomotives was used and an antique hit and miss piston engine. The
indicated power gage plotted piston position vs pressure and the area under
the pv curve was power. With as little as 10% ethanol added the loss of
power was apparent. We also tried acetone, mek and some other octane
boosters. They all had the effect of reducing power.

Stu Fields


They had to run a test to find out that?
Alcohol contains olny about 60% of the power in gas so the power loss
should be quite noticable even with 10%. With E85 you are looking at
close to a 40% drop.
Roger (K8RI) ARRL Life Member
N833R (World's oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com
  #9  
Old July 6th 08, 05:00 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Stuart & Kathryn Fields
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 328
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline


wrote in message
...
On Mon, 09 Jun 2008 00:10:42 -0400, Sliker
wrote:

On Tue, 27 May 2008 20:34:40 -0700, "Stuart & Kathryn Fields"
wrote:


We saw an experiment where an antiqu indicated horsepower device that was
used on locomotives was used and an antique hit and miss piston engine.
The
indicated power gage plotted piston position vs pressure and the area
under
the pv curve was power. With as little as 10% ethanol added the loss of
power was apparent. We also tried acetone, mek and some other octane
boosters. They all had the effect of reducing power.

Stu Fields


They had to run a test to find out that?
Alcohol contains olny about 60% of the power in gas so the power loss
should be quite noticable even with 10%. With E85 you are looking at
close to a 40% drop.
Roger (K8RI) ARRL Life Member
N833R (World's oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com


No we didn't have to run a test. It was just a demonstration of his engine
and the internal power measurement device. I had never seen one of these
devices work, so it was a interesting thing for me to observe the device in
operation with different fuel mixtures. The device had a measure of
resolution that surprised me. Further discussions of the technique lead to
ideas of how it might be adapted to measure Hp in real time on a Lycoming.
Further how might that be adapted to show sticky valves and individual
cylinder problems.
Stu


  #10  
Old July 8th 08, 01:19 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 790
Default Mixing alcohol with gasoline

"Stuart & Kathryn Fields" wrote in message
.. .

wrote in message
...
On Mon, 09 Jun 2008 00:10:42 -0400, Sliker
wrote:

On Tue, 27 May 2008 20:34:40 -0700, "Stuart & Kathryn Fields"
wrote:


We saw an experiment where an antiqu indicated horsepower device that
was
used on locomotives was used and an antique hit and miss piston engine.
The
indicated power gage plotted piston position vs pressure and the area
under
the pv curve was power. With as little as 10% ethanol added the loss
of
power was apparent. We also tried acetone, mek and some other octane
boosters. They all had the effect of reducing power.

Stu Fields


They had to run a test to find out that?
Alcohol contains olny about 60% of the power in gas so the power loss
should be quite noticable even with 10%. With E85 you are looking at
close to a 40% drop.
Roger (K8RI) ARRL Life Member
N833R (World's oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com


No we didn't have to run a test. It was just a demonstration of his
engine and the internal power measurement device. I had never seen one
of these devices work, so it was a interesting thing for me to observe
the device in operation with different fuel mixtures. The device had a
measure of resolution that surprised me. Further discussions of the
technique lead to ideas of how it might be adapted to measure Hp in real
time on a Lycoming. Further how might that be adapted to show sticky
valves and individual cylinder problems.
Stu


The old mechanical systems don't do well at higher engine speeds, the
signal gets attenuated - pressure tranducers, charge amps, and digital
signal processing is the way to go nowadays. Kistler will modify spark
plugs with a pressure tap to measure the in-cylinder pressures wihout
drilling holes in the cylinder head.

--
Geoff
The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com
remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail
When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate.

 




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