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The Expanding E85 Fleet of General Motors
The E85 movement, which is based on an alternate fuel consisting of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, is getting an additional boost thanks to a recent decision by General Motors to expand its existing line up from 9 models to 14. This increase will mean that General Motors, which already has nearly 2 million E85 vehicles on the road, will be able to produce as many as 400,000 E85 vehicles per year. For proponents of alternate fuel sources, the decision by General Motors is certainly a welcome one. Let's take a look at GM's expanding E85 fleet and what this could mean for you, the fuel conscious motorist. E85 has been around for well over a decade now, but has only recently has it been the focus of such widespread attention. Credit gas prices exceeding $3 per gallon for interest in E85 and you can see why General Motors is continuing to expand its line up to meet the demand for alternate fuel sources. The Current Line Up GM's current fleet of E85 vehicles now numbers nine. GM's Silverado, Tahoe, Impala, Monte Carlo, Avalanche, Sierra, Suburban, Yukon, and Yukon XL currently make up the entire fleet of E85 capable vehicles produced by the automaker. The bulk of GM's E85 sales have come since 2000, however the automaker had been building E85 capable vehicles for many years prior to the turn of the millennium. DaimlerChrysler and Ford also build tens of thousands of E85 vehicles per year.... http://groups.google.com/group/waterforfueld |
The Expanding E85 Fleet of General Motors
On Oct 2, 12:32*pm, wrote:
On Thu, 2 Oct 2008 04:37:39 -0700 (PDT), ellis gibb wrote: The E85 movement, which is based on an alternate fuel consisting of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, is getting an additional boost thanks to a recent decision by General Motors to expand its existing line up from 9 models to 14. This increase will mean that General Motors, which already has nearly 2 million E85 vehicles on the road, will be able to produce as many as 400,000 E85 vehicles per year. For proponents of alternate fuel sources, the decision by General Motors is certainly a welcome one. Let's take a look at GM's expanding E85 fleet and what this could mean for you, the fuel conscious motorist. E85 has been around for well over a decade now, but has only recently has it been the focus of such widespread attention. Credit gas prices exceeding $3 per gallon for interest in E85 and you can see why General Motors is continuing to expand its line up to meet the demand for alternate fuel sources. The Current Line Up GM's current fleet of E85 vehicles now numbers nine. GM's Silverado, Tahoe, Impala, Monte Carlo, Avalanche, Sierra, Suburban, Yukon, and Yukon XL currently make up the entire fleet of E85 capable vehicles produced by the automaker. The bulk of GM's E85 sales have come since 2000, however the automaker had been building E85 capable vehicles for many years prior to the turn of the millennium. DaimlerChrysler and Ford also build tens of thousands of E85 vehicles per year.... http://groups.google.com/group/waterforfueld We rented an E85 capable Suburban in the Dakotas last year. I only found a couple stations that sold it and the E85 reduced the already dismal 16mpg to somewhere around 10. It was the same price as the 10% ethanol gas they sell up there.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It's tough to beat the btu in a gallon of gas. |
The Expanding E85 Fleet of General Motors
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The Expanding E85 Fleet of General Motors
On Thu, 2 Oct 2008 17:53:54 -0400, "jamesgangnc"
wrote: Gas still has way more btu per gallon which is a lot more energy density. Propane is one of the lowest with only 92,000 btu per gallon. Gas is 123,000 btu per gallon. Octane only helps you run a higher compression which you could argue lets you make better use of the fuel. But in that, diesel can run pretty high compression and it is the one fuel with even more btu per gallon than gas, 138,000 btu per gallon. "Richard Casady" wrote in message . .. On Thu, 2 Oct 2008 09:49:23 -0700 (PDT), wrote: It's tough to beat the btu in a gallon of gas. With propane the simplist, cheapest mixing valve will work as well as the best fuel injection. Stuff is 100 octane, as well. The stuff _is_ available many places. Slightly more BTU per pound due to the slightly higher proportion of hydrogen. I had propane heat at my previous address, and adding a fitting or two and a hose to the 1 000 gallon tank would have been easy. If I had had a 100 octane hot rod I would have done it. Gas does have higher energy density but that may not necessarily matter. It does with planes, more so than cars and boats. Casady BTU per pound is considered more useful. Never seen a published figure for energy content that wasn't by weight. Per pound, propane is slightly better, although in practice the heavier tank would cancel that. The pilots have always figured gas at six pounds per gallon, while propane is about four. Casady |
The Expanding E85 Fleet of General Motors
wrote:
On Oct 2, 12:32 pm, wrote: On Thu, 2 Oct 2008 04:37:39 -0700 (PDT), ellis gibb wrote: The E85 movement, which is based on an alternate fuel consisting of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, is getting an additional boost thanks to a recent decision by General Motors to expand its existing line up from 9 models to 14. This increase will mean that General Motors, which already has nearly 2 million E85 vehicles on the road, will be able to produce as many as 400,000 E85 vehicles per year. For proponents of alternate fuel sources, the decision by General Motors is certainly a welcome one. Let's take a look at GM's expanding E85 fleet and what this could mean for you, the fuel conscious motorist. E85 has been around for well over a decade now, but has only recently has it been the focus of such widespread attention. Credit gas prices exceeding $3 per gallon for interest in E85 and you can see why General Motors is continuing to expand its line up to meet the demand for alternate fuel sources. The Current Line Up GM's current fleet of E85 vehicles now numbers nine. GM's Silverado, Tahoe, Impala, Monte Carlo, Avalanche, Sierra, Suburban, Yukon, and Yukon XL currently make up the entire fleet of E85 capable vehicles produced by the automaker. The bulk of GM's E85 sales have come since 2000, however the automaker had been building E85 capable vehicles for many years prior to the turn of the millennium. DaimlerChrysler and Ford also build tens of thousands of E85 vehicles per year.... http://groups.google.com/group/waterforfueld We rented an E85 capable Suburban in the Dakotas last year. I only found a couple stations that sold it and the E85 reduced the already dismal 16mpg to somewhere around 10. It was the same price as the 10% ethanol gas they sell up there.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It's tough to beat the btu in a gallon of gas. Every October it starts again. The oxygenated gas hits the pumps in the Wash DC area, My city mileage goes from 15 MPG to 13 MPG and my highway mileage goes from 20 MPG to 17 MPG. I pay the same per gallon of "gas" or whatever it is that is coming out of the pump. But, I'm still putting the same amount of crude into the atmosphere. |
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