- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 65,897
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
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.
On a side note... Brazil makes ethanol from sugar cane, not corn. A huge difference. Cane produces more than twice as much ethanol per acre than corn and takes less energy to convert to ethanol.
Corn as a liquid automobile fuel wastes energy. It doe not creates energy.