posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Oct 2009
Posts: 6,596
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I still don't want the stuff in my boat tanks
On 02/01/2012 11:12 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 1/2/12 1:01 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 02 Jan 2012 10:04:24 -0700,
wrote:
On 01/01/2012 9:38 PM, Tim wrote:
On Jan 1, 10:22 pm, wrote:
On 01/01/2012 8:26 PM, Tim wrote:
http://www.boatingindustry.com/news/...nt-of-energy-e...
Yeah the article is 3 mo. old but it looks like the E15 is wrecking
havoc on even some 4-stroke marine engines.
I shudder the thought of what it would do to my chainsaws too.
Could have told you that 10 years ago. Real gas burns better and does
less damage.
Oh I knew about it 10 years ago, but some people here might not see a
problem with it.
It's not good stuff especially for carburetor type engines.
While I think fuel injected engines handle it better, they too suffer.
I am in a high altitude area, and fuel millage is up but it should be
down. I suspect it is because we get the 100% gasoline.
But I am sure some congress people invested in ethanol.
Why would fuel mileage be down at a high altitude?
Just the opposite, no? Doesn't the 02 sensor detect exhaust gasses
getting richer as the oxygen in the air thins out, and therefore the
system drops back on the amount of gasoline burned so as to maintain the
proper mixture? If there is less oxygen and you burn less fuel, you get
less power but more miles per gallon? Alas, I am a mere English major,
so I doubt my "understanding" of the physics is correct.
Let us go to the extreme to see if you get the point. Lets put a
reciprocating engine without an oxygen supply 1/2 way between here and
the moon.
Does it run? If not, why not? No gases to expand and push? No oxygen?
Bingo.
Generally, the higher the altitude the less fuel effluence the
reciprocating engines become.
--
No mater how liberally you try to ignore rationality and reality,
reality always wins in the end.
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