Nice picture Jeff! A local store here has quite a few differant n/a brews, I like the Beck’s n/a.View attachment 658897 Split for an hour tonight as I did last night. Enjoying a non alchy beer as the sun sets over the scrounge pile.
Nice picture Jeff! A local store here has quite a few differant n/a brews, I like the Beck’s n/a.View attachment 658897 Split for an hour tonight as I did last night. Enjoying a non alchy beer as the sun sets over the scrounge pile.
I know what your saying for sure, but out here there are a good number of people who have e85 capable cars and they don't realize that they will be loosing most everything they save from getting the "cheap" e85.If your running e85 you probably aren't worried about mileage . Figure they make about 150 to the wheels stock so well over double the factory power rev limited at 10k shift at 9500. Everyday boost at 14 the 18 psi was more of a kill tune. I got a year out of that motor. Rings started to go and I sold it for more then I had in it. 2200 pounds on the scale at the green bean plant and near 400 wheel it moved out OK. Also changed a few opinions on people thinking Honda's can't go from a dig on the street.
Agreed, lots of assumptions about ethanol.And, making ethanol generates more carbon output than burning the gallon of gasoline it is replacing.
If it's about reducing dependence on middle east oil, fine. If it's about saving the planet, piss off.
We don't have e85 anymore. Guess they didn't sell enough.I know what your saying for sure, but out here there are a good number of people who have e85 capable cars and they don't realize that they will be loosing most everything they save from getting the "cheap" e85.
You know I'd enjoy that, especially if it was someone else's .
That hard wood sounds like such pain having to deal with all that unburnt charcoal.... and stuff . Sure glad I don’t have to deal with all that stuff, feel sorry for you guys that only have hard wood to burn .
E85, 85% ethanol? We don't get that here. All we get is regular and premium. We calculate octane differently so I believe our regular is actually lower octane then your 87, although we call it 95. All regular is E10, by law. Premium varies by brand 97-99 octane and doesn't have to contain ethanol. As I understand it only BP guarantee it ethanol free (BP ultimate, 99 RON), but Shell v-power nitro (what a name, FFS!) Is 99 RON, usually e free and what I tend to use as there are more shell stations around here. We pay about £1.30 per litre ($6.19/ us gallon) for regular, premium is about 10p/litre more
View attachment 658897 Split for an hour tonight as I did last night. Enjoying a non alchy beer as the sun sets over the scrounge pile.
I'm all for electric technology, I just haven't figured out how to put a blower on a battery?Yeah you can say that again
1.30 pounds per litre? Leaping lizards, that's about 2.50 Oz pesos. No wonder you don't have a car with the proper number of cylinders.
Now put 2 and 2 together. The gubmits not going to do anything for anybody but themselves. The reason Ethenol is in gas is so people cant stockpile it. How long did leaded gas last in a gas can back in the 60's? My uncle is a farmer. He grows corn. He doesn't have any more money now than before they made it so we had to have ethenol in gas.IMHO ethanol is a created subsidy to help farmers. It has no benefit in efficiency or longevity when it comes to combustion engines.
People can say what they want but fuels with ethanol break down much faster when left untreated.
That’s my clothesline. I had to buy a new pole when I built, to hang the transformer on. So I kept the old one and planted it. My boys have a basketball net on it.That's a beautiful shot, Jeff. Good amount of wood there too . Do you reckon you can get the power company to move that line and pole for you? Swap for some scrounge maybe?
Our gas is "E10" also, regardless of octane. 87 to 94 is all "E10". Erhenol free gas is a U.S. dollar higher per gallon then ethenol. Go figure.All regular is E10, by law. Premium varies by brand 97-99 octane and doesn't have to contain ethanol.
^^^^ This guys going places. I can still get 100ll if I want to stock pile gas and I have no issue with cutting the cats off my vehicle to to run it if it comes to that.Now put 2 and 2 together. The gubmits not going to do anything for anybody but themselves. The reason Ethenol is in gas is so people cant stockpile it. How long did leaded gas last in a gas can back in the 60's? My uncle is a farmer. He grows corn. He doesn't have any more money now than before they made it so we had to have ethenol in gas.
Back in 88 I had a Chevy Geo Metro. 1 litre 3 cylinder. No air, with a 5 speed. It was made by Suzuki. Had plenty pick up to merge into highway traffic with out fear of getting stuck in a Semi's tread. Got dead on 60 MPG. I had 2 friends that had the same basic car with an auto and air, and they both said it was scary trying to merge. I loved mine for a work car, my drive was 72 miles round trip. Only problem was at 125,000 miles it just started falling apart, cheap disposable car. It was a carb car, just think what it could do with injection and a turbo? Probably turn into an aluminium grenade. I'd buy another one for around town use. Maryland talked about medium speed vehicles for a while. That would open up the mini pick ups, but not yet.Tax on fuel has always been high here and lately the emissions laws drive the tech towards small and turbo equipped engines too. 1 to 1.4 litre, 3 or 4 cylinder, turbocharged is fairly common now.
I don't like everything they do in EU, but small turbo engines is one thing we should really be paying attention to. I dont understand why all vehicles here are not AWD and turbo out of the box. The performance/efficiency/emissions gains are hard to argue. Could you imagine what a Mustang would be with an AWD, turbo/super charged flat 6 mid-engine design? My buddy has an AWD Taurus SHO with the 3.5L ecoboost and that car will eat mustangs for breakfast. Then have Camaro for lunch. Then finish the day with Chargers. American muscle cars are weak now.Tax on fuel has always been high here and lately the emissions laws drive the tech towards small and turbo equipped engines too. 1 to 1.4 litre, 3 or 4 cylinder, turbocharged is fairly common now.
That's exactly what they want you to believe .