litesong
Getting familiar with the group...
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2015
- Messages
- 50
- Reaction score
- 4
- Points
- 0
Dual fuel engines can't have a C.R. high enough to take advantage of the knock control of straight ethanol because the engine would be likely to detonate on normal gasoline.
E10 fuel is a blended fuel. It's combustion characteristics are that of the blend------------not two separate fuels..... At partial throttle, the cylinder is... never peak compression pressure. The reduction is 2-3% with E10.....reductions in mpg.
In all past posts of his, 427435 agrees that gasoline engines, designed to burn 100% gasoline, have lower compression ratios than ethanol engines designed to burn 100% ethanol. 427435 even agrees that partial throttle(in a gasoline engine) doesn't even reach the peak compression pressure for a gasoline engine. Thus 427435 must agree that ethanol in a gasoline engine has a "double whammy" reduced pressure effect during partial throttle, which is the overwhelming condition producing energy in an engine. Compression ratio of a fuel charge is THE premier attribute of engines to extract energy from fuels. Yet 327435, despite the "double whammy" reduced pressure effect in a gasoline engine, shills that ethanol produces the same energy/btu(mpg/bht) as if it was produced in an ethanol engine.
427435 works hard NOT to understand the 8%, 7% & 5% loss in mpg that 10% ethanol blends have vs. E0.......even tho he understands the "double whammy" ethanol pressure loss effect.