PROFLEX COMMANDER e85 98-02 fbody conversion kit experiences
According to the website..."The patented ProFlex™ Commander adaptive flex fuel system for 1998-02 GM F-body V8 cars allows you to start making more power and running cooler with E85. True plug and play flex-fuel for your Camaro, Firebird or Trans Am in about an hour with no tuning required.
ProFlex Commander Features:
- Complete system - everything you need to run E85
- 100% Dyno tested for safety, durability and power gains
- Easy DIY installation - Under an hour with common tools
- Patented BlendSense™ technology adjusts in real time with 30 millisecond refresh rate
- True flex fuel - switch from gas to ethanol and back anytime
- Improved injector management for more power on gas or E85
- 7-10% More wheel HP and torque on E85 (dyno proven)
- No tuning required - Compatible with stock or performance gas tunes; instantly adapts to new tunes
- Cleaner emissions and cooler cylinder, oil and coolant temps
- Race grade fuel at the pump - high octane, low cost
- Compatible with power adders and bolt-ons
- ProFlex Connect app provides accurate, real-time ethanol content on your iPhone or Android device via BT Wireless communication
- Cold Start Plus™ - improves fuel atomization for easier starting in cold weather
Choose Commander Pro (option below)
Choose the ProFlex Commander Pro for your vehicle if you have aftermarket forced induction or aftermarket 600cc/60lb/hr or larger injectors. If you plan to make these upgrades later order the PRO. It will work fine with your existing set-up and will automatically adapt when you install your upgrades.
The Commander PRO was specifically designed for improved injector function in forced induction and large injector environments
First off, no you dont lose any tuning ability, Holly EFI systems are not affected, its a plug and play thing, and its a standalone unit seperate from the rest of the car. It piggybacks on the stock harness, going between the injector harness. There is 1 ground and then a control unit and sensor that goes on a fuel line, which gets power from the injectors. It reads ethanol content and then modulates extra fuel to the injectors based on the reading. You can unplug the control unit as long as theres no more than 10% ethanol present (pump gas) and the car will run just fine. Its only needed for ethanol above 10%. So E20, E50, E85, E95, etc. You can even run straight alcohol if needed but thats not advised without stuff like PPM added to fuel for lubrication issues. Straight ethanol doesnt have the "cushion" that the little bit of gas provides, and its hard on the oil and fuel system.
You need to be sure your pumps, lines, and injectors are approved to run high ethanol fuels. Rubber breaks down so you need silicone seals, and teflon liners to protect parts that have to be rubber (like bridge hoses in a 3rd gen thats had fuel pump work and chopped the metal fuel lines to save time).
As for tuning, you tune on 93 octane, or pump gas grade of your choice. Do not tune on E85, youll get locked out of regular gas. Tune on gas, then fill up with E85, E85R, E95, whatever you want, and the Proflex does the conversion for you. Power gains are about 7-10% for 85% ethanol. You use 30% more fuel flow to run it so make sure injectors can keep up. Most cars from 2008 and forward will be fine. For stock LS1, I don't know. Just check before you run it.
No you cant run toluene addatives for track nights, It throws off the mix. PPM should be ok as long as you dont dump a ton in there.
Engine and oil temps will run 5-20 degrees cooler because the alcohol helps or cool stuff down. But that's for 85% or higher. If you have 60%, like a crappy pump E85 batch (it happens), dont expect lower temps.
Can you feel it? If you run 500hp already, then yes top end it noticable but not crazy. Stock 325hp, you won't notice much. Remember 7-10% gain. So thats 32hp vs 50hp on a good tank of E85. Its less likely to knock as well, even when hot, so one benefit it the engine wont pull timing from knock, or ar least not as much.
Can you run forced induction? Yes, just tune it on 93 and let the sensor do the work for E85, it can handle it. BUT... Youll need the Pro version of the Proflex because it runs software thats set up for boosted applications.
Install time, on mine, 20 mins. Wire looming and zip ties took 30-40 mins. So about an hour to make it all look pretty. Your milage may vary. It depends on the car and how much room you have. Also how your fuel line is set up. Mine was super easy. But remember this is a 392 (a challenger), so I cant speak on install time for the LS Fbodies. Just looking at the bay though, probably close to the same.
OH and cost - if you run anything below 93 octane, it costs more to run. Its cheaper per gallon, but uses 30% more fuel, so get a calculator out if youre below 93. In most places, of you already run 93, it pretty much equals out. In tourist season in FL, its about 5% more expensive than gas for me. In off seasons when prices drop, its significantly cheaper. Prices here range from 1.70 to 2.55 per gallon. And this also depends on the batch as well, not just demand. Some batches cost more to make so they cost more at the pump till that tank is emptied. And pump E85 ranges from like 54-83%. On pumps the ethanol its almost never 85%. So keep that in mind. You wont always get good E85 at the pump and you wont know till you fill up and see the number the phone app tells you. They also use lower grade fuel as a base. For true E85 with race grade base, you need stuff like Sunoco E85-R, which is 15$ a gallon for a 5 gallon pail. Your other option is pump gas E85 and then pour in E95 from VP or Sunoco till its true E85, but it wont be race grade. Thats just an octane issue though. Power gain remains the same because the oxidizer is the ethanol content. Just may run a few PSI less boost for non-race grade to avoid knock if you push that far up into the PSI range.
If you have other questions, just ask.
Last edited by DevWolf; Oct 2, 2021 at 08:30 PM.
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Website has a lot of interesting details. 30 whp &,30 wtq claimed on LS1 Corvette. 13whp & 20 wtq on LS2 Corvette. A nice bolt on if reliable and it delivers 30 whp, even at nine Franklin's.
Last edited by 99 Black Bird T/A; Feb 11, 2022 at 11:02 AM.
Long story short, certain sensors can be shared between stock PCM and standalone while other cannot be shared. Then its a matter of fully understanding what each wire does for each computer then merging harnesses to keep them both working. After spending several hours reading diagrams I determined this is best left to someone with real electrical know-how.
Last edited by 98LS1auto; Apr 16, 2022 at 03:50 PM.










