http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/02/06/8367959/index.htm
1/25/2006 4:41:00 PM
This is a good question...obviously, one positive aspect of ethanol is that it comes from a totally renewable resource. However, we have an entire infrastructure geared toward petroleum production, and ethanol poses new, somewhat unique problems with distribution, storage, and marketing.Something worth noting here is that Brazil's use of ethanol stems from its already-established production of ethanol from readily-available sugar cane. We don't produce any crops that can yield as much ethanol per unit of crop, nor do we have the established sugar cane industry that Brazil does. Sorghum, however, may very well be our answer. Gearing up for large-scale production will most likely become the big bottle-neck.I'm not that educated on the matter, but it's something that intrigues me greatly.
1/25/2006 4:51:59 PM
more like fuel of the PASThmmm. if only a major us automaker had began building flex fuel vehicles 10 years ago...
1/25/2006 5:00:39 PM
anybody know if ethanol can be run safely in high octane applications? Or is it only for shitboxes and Mustang GT's?
1/25/2006 5:21:01 PM
Ethanol has a higher effective octane rating than damn near every pump gas you can find. If I had my MAE408 book I could give you the complete rundown on it.
1/25/2006 5:34:08 PM
of course--people use alcohol injection all the timeSo what is involved in making a Flex Fuel car? Anybody know?[Edited on January 25, 2006 at 5:47 PM. Reason : flex fuel]
1/25/2006 5:44:03 PM
plenty of people running ultra high boost setups for drag racing run pure methanol. 50psi is on the low side of things. what's kickass is that the motor is cool too the touch after running so problems with heatsoak and what not go away. jon shepherd is running it on his dsm right now.
1/25/2006 6:39:20 PM
and methanol and ethanol are or aren't the same? i haven't had organic in a while [Edited on January 25, 2006 at 6:41 PM. Reason : i know the racing go-kart's usually use methanol]
1/25/2006 6:40:38 PM
The flex-fuel Fords that are fairly common in fleet use are set up for CNG and not ethanol, correct?
1/25/2006 6:47:03 PM
i think alcohol injection is typically methanol.
1/25/2006 6:51:22 PM
injectors setup for alcohol and make sure you don't have anything in your fuel system that will be disolved or corroded by it. also i higher volume fuel pump and if you want the same distance per tank... a bigger gas tank.[Edited on January 25, 2006 at 7:45 PM. Reason : .]
1/25/2006 7:40:22 PM
1/25/2006 7:43:01 PM
damn that color is harsh[Edited on January 25, 2006 at 7:47 PM. Reason : was]
1/25/2006 7:47:11 PM
[Edited on January 25, 2006 at 7:58 PM. Reason : i didn't see the was... yeah i didn't like it either]
1/25/2006 7:57:52 PM
1/25/2006 8:07:53 PM
yeah.. the injectors have to flow more b/c the energy density is lower for alcohol...
1/26/2006 8:11:08 AM
AF ratio for alcohol is around 6:1 as opposed to gasoline's ~15:1. That's the biggest reason for needing larger injectors.If engines were made to run on E85 (i.e. very high compression ratio), it's possible to get the same fuel mileage or better than gasoline, even though there is less heat energy in the E85.[Edited on January 26, 2006 at 9:31 AM. Reason : .]
1/26/2006 9:29:37 AM
how efficient is pure ethanol? like how many mpg would you expect?
1/26/2006 9:33:36 AM
Efficiency depends on so many things, that I couldn't venture a guess.
1/26/2006 9:49:25 AM
what i'm getting at.. is it cheaper, in terms of fuel cost, to run ethanol vs. gasoline or diesel?
1/26/2006 10:11:12 AM
Right now, no. At least not in mainstream flex fuel cars. If there was an engine that could only run on E85, then maybe so.[Edited on January 26, 2006 at 11:19 AM. Reason : .]
1/26/2006 11:18:16 AM
any engine designed for more than one fuel has to comprimise effieciency for both
1/26/2006 11:45:28 AM
Exactly.
1/26/2006 12:47:09 PM
You can get by on quite a bit higher compression ratio with any kind of alcohol. Higher compression ratio=greater efficiency.I'd think it would be best to tailor fleet vehicles to run on straight E85 if the proper distribution network could be put in place. I realize the reality of this is pretty damn slim, unless the vehicle's normal operating range is pretty small. I don't see this as a viable reality for the majority of private passenger vehicles on the road.One thing that I'm wondering is this: what would it take to scale up ethanol production to provide adequate supplies for exclusive use as a motor fuel? Do we have means for that kind of grain/cereal production already? What are good alternative crops with high yields? Sorghum? Soy (for biodiesel, primarily)?
1/26/2006 2:47:26 PM
yeah, i did a research project of sorts on this once...i don't remember what the outcome was though
1/27/2006 9:33:13 AM
That wasn't a research project then.It was a school report.
1/27/2006 10:01:40 AM
They've developed new processes of making ethanol from shit besides sugar and corn, like tree bark and stuff. So that should eventually help supply issues.
1/27/2006 3:27:23 PM
they sell e85 at a bp back in charlotte. do the manufacturers have to make changed to the blocks, etc to run on the e85?
1/28/2006 1:59:42 PM
Its the only way to clean up cars and still have fun with themelectric cars are useless until we get rid of fossil fuel powerplants... its just worthless cause you're still getting the energy from the same place you just have a middle step that causes a loss of efficiencyhydrogen will be clean but nearly impossible for your shade tree mechanic to work on and since our govt. is brought to you by the letters O I and L even though our farms could use the added revenue you'll never see it happen... fucking politics.... not until exxon owns a whole bunch of grain farms etc.^ no it is more corrosive so maybe fuel lines but i know a couple people running alki on regular old iron windsor blocks (302, 351, or 5.0, 5.8 for the metric folk)[Edited on January 28, 2006 at 2:07 PM. Reason : .]
1/28/2006 2:06:00 PM
10/18/2016 1:11:29 PM
]
10/18/2016 4:26:49 PM
10/18/2016 6:21:45 PM
Pretty cool. Obvious questions being how much energy and copper inputs are needed to yield a unit of ethanol.[Edited on October 18, 2016 at 6:33 PM. Reason : Why copper?]
10/18/2016 6:32:37 PM
With all of the advances in battery technology in ev's within the last 5-10 years (300 miles per charge), and the rapid advances in quick charging ability, i would say no.
10/18/2016 7:11:22 PM
existing tech can run on ethanol, you're absolutely going to see this pick up to help bridge the current ICE - EV gap
10/18/2016 10:17:22 PM
^I think you're underestimating how much this will appeal to the AGW CO2 is evil crowd. And while battery tech is finally making some headway, you can't dismiss how horrible it is on the environment to mine all those precious metals. (nor how labor intensive the processes to create batteries are).
10/19/2016 9:12:35 AM
10/20/2016 1:00:21 AM
In my opinion, yes. Also the last time I checked nobody was recovering crude oil using child/slave labor.
10/20/2016 9:29:19 AM
10/20/2016 10:54:03 AM
Valid points. But are you really trying to argue that this potential new source of ethanol will make no difference?
10/20/2016 12:41:47 PM
10/20/2016 12:59:31 PM
10/20/2016 7:46:03 PM
Exactly. All he cares about in this discussion is EV=BAD, as evidenced by his false equivalence of the environmental impact of crude oil mining/refining/burning vs the mining of lithium ion battery materials.]
10/21/2016 1:03:44 AM
10/21/2016 10:26:47 AM
Hyperbole, at worst
10/21/2016 11:06:06 AM
Blah blah, nice try. I've said more than once on here that I'm in favor of choice, i.e. alternatives for automobile propulsion.
10/24/2016 9:36:04 AM