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Fuel additive for ethanol fuel

Cratos

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what additive are you using to advert the ethanol problems on carbureted motors? i am getting tired of having to mix octane booster on the non-ethanol I only have 89 oct locally so I have to mix in 5-gallon batches.
 

Juan Veldez

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My understanding is that you can buy the new re-built kits for the carb's and they are made to be ethanol friendly. At least the one I bought for my thermoquad was. But I still use ethanol free gas with octane booster. We have "blue pumps" here in Idaho, so I can fill up at the pump while adding the booster.
 

mmissile

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My rubber-lined braided-steel lines, all took a "set", as if the they were preformed on my hemi wagon. Ethanol is just trouble....
 

Xcudame

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The newer carb rebuild kits are better. Unfortunately you have to plan on rebuilding the carb every 3 or 4 years with the crappy gasoline they offer in some states.
 

DetMatt1

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I’ve been running 1 oz of marine 2 cycle(TC-W3) per every 5 gallons of gas for years and have FAR less ethanol related issues than I did before I started using it. I don’t even use anything else for winter storage and the cars fire right up after 6 months.
 

greatscot3

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I've been using Stabil 360 and so far, so good.
I think it's a relatively new product made specifically for ethanol gas.
 

Challenger RTA

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Just my 2¢. Living in the land of ice and snow and where the hard winds blow. Any water in the fuel system turns to a solid. From my experience with Dry gas isopropyl alcohol it takes about 15 min to 45 min to un thaw fuel lines. I don't know if it can be used on a regular basis with E fuels. It was intended for a thawing frozen fuel lines or added in the prevention of that problem. I would have to study the product to say so. Someone here may now of the effects of using it on a regular basis. A top fuel alcohol engine builder might have the answer. Myself I run the carburetor dry on any engine when not going to use it. Back in the day the gasoline would varnish the carburetor.

Dry gas isopropyl alcohol,is a very helpful fuel additive that is used to remove water from gasoline and prevent water-contaminated gasoline from freezing. While the solution itself is actually called dry gas, there is one brand of this fluid named Drygas.
Water should never be in the gas tank, fuel lines, fuel injectors, or combustion chamber. There are a number of issues water-contaminated gasoline can bring about:
  • Water does not combust when mixed with air inside of the combustion chamber. This means that if the gasoline going into an engine has too much water in it, the fuel will not burn very well. In some cases this can stall the engine with the watery gas still in the combustion chamber, corroding metal surfaces and generally making a mess of things.
  • Water also has a nasty tendency to freeze when it reaches a temperature below 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
  • Water causes rust and corrosion in the gas tank, metal fittings, and metal lines along the fuel system. This is particularly bad for the fuel system, as some of the debris can make it all the way to the fuel injectors and eventually clog them.

How does dry gas work?​

Based on either methanol or isopropyl alcohol, dry gas rids the fuel system of water by binding to the water and then burning it all off in the combustion chamber. Because of alcohol’s extremely low freezing point, it also acts as antifreeze to water-contaminated gasoline.
Different engines have different responses to dry gas and some will run differently with it in the fuel. Dry gas is not really a necessary part of routine maintenance, but if there is any reason to suspect that a vehicle is suffering from water-contaminated gas, especially in the winter, dry gas is an excellent solution.
 

Challenger RTA

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Oxygenated chemical compounds are hydrocarbons which contain at least one oxygen atom as a part of their chemical structure. The term often refers to oxygenated chemical compounds added to fuels. Oxygenates are usually employed as gasoline additives to reduce carbon monoxide and soot that is created during the burning of the fuel. Compounds related to soot, such as polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and nitrated PAHs, are also reduced.[1]

The most common oxygenates are either alcohols or ethers.


 

Challenger RTA

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MEMORANDUM
SUBJECT: Water Phase Separation in Oxygenated Gasoline
- Corrected version of Kevin Krause memo
FROM: David Korotney, Chemical Engineer
Fuels Studies and Standards Branch
TO: Susan Willis, Manager
Fuels Studies and Standards Group
On May 26, 1995, Kevin Krause finalized a memorandum
describing the conditions under which water phase separation will
occur in oxygenated gasolines. Recently, several errors were
discovered in that memorandum. I have made the necessary
corrections, and now resubmit the complete text of Kevin's memo
for your review and approval.
Introduction
With the introduction of oxygenated gasoline came the
concern of water phase separation. Water in gasoline can have
different effects on an engine, depending on whether it is in
solution or a separate phase, and depending on the type of engine
being used. While separate water phases in a fuel can be
damaging to an engine, small amounts of water in solution with
gasoline should have no adverse effects on engine components. If
precautions to prevent water from entering the fuel system are
taken, water phase separation will likely not occur.
Discussion
Oxygenated fuels usually contain either ethanol or methyl-
tertiary-butyl-ether (MTBE). Other possible oxygenates include
ethyl-tertiary-butyl-ether (ETBE), tertiary-amyl-methyl-ether
(TAME), and tertiary-butyl-alcohol (TBA). Chemically, ethanol
and MTBE behave differently. Ethanol, for example, will readily
dissolve water, and is considered infinitely soluble in water.
MTBE, on the other hand, has little affinity for water, and can
only be dissolved in water to a content of 4.3 volume percent (at
room temperature). Therefore, ethanol/gasoline blends can
dissolve much more water than conventional gasoline, whereas
gasoline/MTBE blends act very much like conventional gasoline
when in the presence of water.
 

Challenger RTA

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Figure 1
1701102349733.png

Since ethanol and water readily dissolve in each other, when
ethanol is used as an additive in gasoline, water will actually
dissolve in the blended fuel to a much greater extent than in
conventional gasoline. When the water reaches the maximum amount
that the gasoline blend can dissolve, any additional water will
separate from the gasoline. The amount of water required (in
percent of the total volume) for this phase separation to take
place varies with temperature, as shown in Figure 1. As an
example, at 60 degrees F, water can be absorbed by a blend of 90%
gasoline and 10% ethanol up to a content of 0.5 volume percent
before it will phase separate. This means that approximately 3.8
teaspoons of water can be dissolved per gallon of the fuel before
the water will begin to phase separate.
Since MTBE has much less affinity for water than does
ethanol, however, phase separation for MTBE/gasoline blends
occurs with only a small amount of water, as shown in Figure 2.
A blend of 85% gasoline and 15% MTBE can hold only 0.5 teaspoons
at 60 degrees F per gallon before the water will phase separate.
For comparison, one gallon of 100% gasoline can dissolve only
0.15 teaspoons water at the same temperature. These figures are
far below the 3.8 teaspoons which will cause phase separation in
the 90/10 ethanol blend.
 

Challenger RTA

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1701102501357.png

Water can enter gasoline engines in two ways: in solution
with the fuel or as a separate phase from the gasoline. Water in
solution operates as no more than an inert diluent in the
combustion process. Since water is a natural product of
combustion, any water in solution is removed with the product
water in the exhaust system. The only effect water in solution
with gasoline can have on an engine is decreased fuel economy.
For example, assuming a high water concentration of 0.5 volume
percent, one would see a 0.5 percent decrease in fuel economy.
This fuel economy decrease is too low for an engine operator to
notice, since many other factors (such as ambient temperature
changes, wind and road conditions, etc.) affect fuel economy to a
much larger extent.


Water as a separate phase, however, can have differing
effects on gasoline engines, depending on whether the engine is
two-stroke (generally, smaller engines) or four-stroke (generally
automobile engines). In the case of conventional and MTBE-
blended gasolines, when a water phase forms, it will drop to the
bottom of the fuel tank, and can therefore be drawn into the
engine by the fuel pump. Therefore, large amounts of water will
prevent the engine from running, but no engine damage will
result.
Phase separation in ethanol-blended gasoline, however, can
be more damaging than in MTBE blends and straight gasoline. When
phase separation occurs in an ethanol blended gasoline, the water
will actually begin to remove the ethanol from the gasoline.
Therefore, the second phase which can occur in ethanol blends
contains both ethanol and water, as opposed to just water in MTBE
blends and conventional gasoline. In the case of two-stroke
 

Challenger RTA

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engines, this water-ethanol phase will compete with the blended
oil for bonding to the metal engine parts. Therefore, the engine
will not have enough lubrication, and engine damage may result.
In the case of four-stroke engines, the water-ethanol phase may
combust in the engine. This combustion can be damaging to the
engine because the water ethanol phase creates a leaner
combustion mixture (i.e. air to fuel ratio is higher than ideal).
Leaner mixtures tend to combust at higher temperatures, and can
damage engines, particularly those without sensors to calibrate
air to fuel ratios.
Phase separation, however, generally only occurs when liquid
water (as opposed to water vapor) is introduced to the fuel
system. If tank vents are left open, either in the engine being
operated, or at a fuel distribution station, water can enter the
fuel system in the form of rain (or spillage, etc.) or through
the air in the form of moisture. Also, since conventional
gasoline absorbs very little water, there is often a layer of
water present at the bottom of a filling station tank normally
used to store conventional gasoline (water is more dense than
gasoline, and will therefore sink to the bottom). Before an
oxygenated gasoline is added to such a storage tank for the first
time (particularly ethanol-blended fuels), this water must be
purged from the tank to prevent the water from removing any
ethanol from the fuel.
Since the solubility of water in both gasoline and air
decreases with a decrease in temperature, water can enter a fuel
system through condensation when the atmospheric temperature
changes. For example, assume a tank containing conventional
gasoline contains only one gallon of fuel. Assume also that it
is closed while the outside temperature is 100 degrees F with a
relative humidity of 100 percent. If this tank is left sealed
and the temperature drops to 40 degrees F, water will likely
condense on the inside of the tank, and dissolve in the fuel. In
order for enough water to condense from the air to cause
gasoline-water phase separation, however, there must be
approximately 200 gallons of air per gallon of fuel over this
temperature drop (100 to 40 degrees). Since oxygenated fuels can
hold even more water than conventional gasoline, it is even more
unlikely that enough water will condense from the air to cause
gasoline-water phase separation.
Another way water can enter gasoline is through absorption
from the air. Water, in the form of water vapor, can dissolve in
gasoline. The more humid the air, the faster the water vapor
will dissolve in the gasoline. Due to chemical equilibrium,
however, assuming a constant temperature, phase separation will

5
never occur if the only source of water is from the air. Only
enough water to saturate the fuel can enter the system, and no
more. Water vapor, however, dissolves in gasoline very slowly,
even at very high humidity. For example, at a constant
temperature of 100 degrees F and relative humidity of 100%, it
would take well over 200 days to saturate one gallon of gasoline
in an open gasoline can (assuming the only source of water is
water vapor from the air). Water absorption from the air is far
slower at lower temperatures and humidities. (At a temperature
of 70 degrees and relative humidity of 70%, it would take over
two years to saturate one gallon of conventional gasoline in the
same gasoline can.) Again, oxygenated gasolines can hold more
water than conventional gasoline, and would therefore take much
longer to saturate with water.
Conclusion
Water phase separation in any gasoline is most likely to
occur when liquid water comes in contact with the fuel. (Water
in the form of moisture in the air will generally not cause phase
separation.) Water which is in solution with gasoline is not a
problem in any engine, but as a separate phase it can prevent an
engine from running or even cause damage. Since oxygenated
gasolines, however, can hold more water than conventional
gasoline, phase separation is less likely to occur with
oxygenates present.
For any gasoline, simple precautions to prevent phase
separation from occuring should be taken. First of all, gasoline
should not be stored for long periods of time, especially during
seasonal changes which usually have large temperature changes
associated with them. (For both oxygenated and conventional
gasolines, gumming can also occur which is detrimental to any
engine.) If it is unavoidable to store gasoline for a long
period of time, one should be sure that the tank if full to
prevent condensation of water from the air, and the addition of a
fuel stabilizer should be considered. Lastly, care should be
taken not to allow water into the fuel sytem while filling fuel
tanks or operating the engine -- in the form of rain or a spash,
for example.
 

Challenger RTA

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References
"Alcohols and Ethers: A Technical Assessment of Their
Application as Fuels and Fuel Components." API Publication
#4261, July 1988.
Douthit, W.H., B.C. Davis, E.D. Steinke, and H.M. Doherty.
"Performace Features of 15% MTBE/Gasoline Blends." SAE Technical
Paper Series #881667, October 1988.
"Fuel Ethanol." Technical Bulletin, Archer Daniels Midland
Company, September 1993.
"Storing and Handling Ethanol and Gasoline-Ethanol Blends at
Distribution Terminals and Service Stations." API Recommended
Practice #1626, First Edition, April 1985.
"The Use of Oxygenated Gasoline in Lawn & Garden Power Equipment,
Motorcycles, Boats, & Recreational Equipment." Downstream
Alternatives, Inc. Document #941101, November 1994.
"Use of Oxygenated Gasolines in Non-Automotive Engines." Chevron
Technical Bulletin, December 1992
 

Cratos

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I have found the VP octane booster has worked the best so fair 1.25 oz to 5 gallons of 89 non eth going to try 50 /50 mix of 100 LL next :)
 
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