prove_it
Well-known member
None. I've only seen that from vehicles that sit a while. It is recommended in race cars that go to storage to push regular fuel through the lines and injectors before storage. This clears out the E85. Ethanol will pull moisture from everywhere and that's where the goo develops. Generally it's white, but the crud from the 20 yr old tank turns it black.
I once put my carburetored R6 on E85, picked up 7whp. I let it sit for a day and the carbs completely gelled up and wouldn't start. Even a small amount pulled moisture from the air.
I've placed raw E99 in a glass jar and threw in a chuck of factory rubber line laying around. Sealed it up and shook it daily, after 6 months the fuel was still clear and the hose was still intact, with no evidence of decay.
Here in SD we've been playing with ethanol for over 10yrs now and no one has had any lines rot out and leak, or gas tanks rot out, or any of those stupid big oil company lies happen. Yes, injectors will "gel" up, but thats due to sitting around for months exposed to the air. A lot of the issues are due to the late 70's Gasohol blends. Back then they were using ethanol and methanol blends. The ethanol fuels had no issues, but the methanol did. Methanol will corrode lines and tanks, which is why that died out. People still associate methanol with ethanol.
Myth busted. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/cool.gif
I once put my carburetored R6 on E85, picked up 7whp. I let it sit for a day and the carbs completely gelled up and wouldn't start. Even a small amount pulled moisture from the air.
I've placed raw E99 in a glass jar and threw in a chuck of factory rubber line laying around. Sealed it up and shook it daily, after 6 months the fuel was still clear and the hose was still intact, with no evidence of decay.
Here in SD we've been playing with ethanol for over 10yrs now and no one has had any lines rot out and leak, or gas tanks rot out, or any of those stupid big oil company lies happen. Yes, injectors will "gel" up, but thats due to sitting around for months exposed to the air. A lot of the issues are due to the late 70's Gasohol blends. Back then they were using ethanol and methanol blends. The ethanol fuels had no issues, but the methanol did. Methanol will corrode lines and tanks, which is why that died out. People still associate methanol with ethanol.
Myth busted. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/cool.gif