E85 on NA 383 lt1
Thanks
If you are seeking out a higher octane alcohol fuel, I STRONGLY suggest talking to a company called GEVO about their 102 octane Iso-Butanol. You will never have this fuel gunk up since it is not hygroscopic like ethanol, which absorbs moisture and goes through phase separation from gasoline. You can use Iso-Butanol up to 100% and you can use the air-fuel ratio of gasoline without any problems, the fuel ratio for Butanol is 11.2. Lastly, Butanol is not harmful on any component of an engine, even carbureted engines can use it without the problems of gunking they experience with ethanol blend gasoline.
ON dirt cars you flush the fuel system after each race weekend so you wont get
the white spooge in the fuel system or get corrosion on the AL parts.
There are additives that are similar to stabil, specifically for Pure Alchohol
The only one I've used it Uplon once the cars I worked on started using it the
fuel system issues went away.
To give a loose idea,, switching a Dwarf Car(1300 CC Air cooled GSXR motor)
from race gas to Meth, required 3x the size fuel cell.
dropped head temp 200 degrees.
Small engine and marine, can use fiberglass and certain types of plastic for fuel tanks. E85 can act like a solvent, dissolving resins and susceptible. seals.
Trending Topics
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
If you are seeking out a higher octane alcohol fuel, I STRONGLY suggest talking to a company called GEVO about their 102 octane Iso-Butanol. You will never have this fuel gunk up since it is not hygroscopic like ethanol, which absorbs moisture and goes through phase separation from gasoline. You can use Iso-Butanol up to 100% and you can use the air-fuel ratio of gasoline without any problems, the fuel ratio for Butanol is 11.2. Lastly, Butanol is not harmful on any component of an engine, even carbureted engines can use it without the problems of gunking they experience with ethanol blend gasoline.
Iso-Butanol would be the safe bet for me, and it is non-hygroscopic so it is an alcohol fuel that behaves like pure non-ethanol blend gasoline. Even the BTU rating is nearly the same as pure gasoline so you stand to use less pure Iso-Butanol than you would E85 although gasoline will still net a tad more power. Like E85, Iso-Butanol has a higher octane level so you can bump up your compression a tad to compensate for the lack of burning power compared to pure gasoline. I am biased to Iso-Butanol when I am on the bandwagon to have it replace gasoline and for normal N-Butanol to be an additive to both conventional diesel and bio-diesel fuel.
The EPA may have approved 16% Butanol with gasoline but you CAN use it up to 100%, which is what I intend to do when I am making the money to justify it. Another thing I forgot to mention, since any alcohol fuel burns cleaner than petroleum based fuel, a cleaner engine will remain more efficient and this will result in better fuel efficiency. So, despite LS1 Tech not being involved in the EcoModding game, for any daily driving guys who want to balance performance with fuel economy, this is something to seriously consider.
Are you referring to me? It is kinda hard to get out more when I am trying to get my degrees in the new career I wish to have. It is all about priorities!
And I held 2 jobs while getting both of my degrees, and still got out. So can you
And I held 2 jobs while getting both of my degrees, and still got out. So can you

What I am adding to our discussion is an alcohol fuel for daily drivers that behaves just like pure non-ethanol blend gasoline yet still it is a superior alcohol fuel with nearly the same burning power as gasoline AND with 102 octane rating which allows you to bump up your compression ratio a tad more and will be something I will explore after I have tested this fuel in my stock engine by that time.
You can push E85 all you want for the racing community but for daily drivers who may want to race their cars as well, or in my case, enjoy autocross some time in the future while still using the car as my daily driver, Iso-Butanol is the way to go! If marine engines have no issues running on this fuel then obviously my 1997 5.7L LT1 won't have problems running on it either, AND, I won't need to modify anything on my car since Iso-Butanol is not corrosive to certain metals and rubber as is Ethanol. The car may benefit more with the proper air-fuel ratio but I can still get away with running it on it's stock air-fuel ratio! I am just saying.
With regards to your college experience, good for you. My experience is my own and I am going about it differently so thank you.
Last edited by Phoenix'97; Oct 14, 2018 at 09:31 PM.
What I am adding to our discussion is an alcohol fuel for daily drivers that behaves just like pure non-ethanol blend gasoline yet still it is a superior alcohol fuel with nearly the same burning power as gasoline AND with 102 octane rating which allows you to bump up your compression ratio a tad more and will be something I will explore after I have tested this fuel in my stock engine by that time.
You can push E85 all you want for the racing community but for daily drivers who may want to race their cars as well, or in my case, enjoy autocross some time in the future while still using the car as my daily driver, Iso-Butanol is the way to go! If marine engines have no issues running on this fuel then obviously my 1997 5.7L LT1 won't have problems running on it either, AND, I won't need to modify anything on my car since Iso-Butanol is not corrosive to certain metals and rubber as is Ethanol. The car may benefit more with the proper air-fuel ratio but I can still get away with running it on it's stock air-fuel ratio! I am just saying.
With regards to your college experience, good for you. My experience is my own and I am going about it differently so thank you.
And I didn't bring up college, you did. So like I said, get out more and don't be so closed minded.
As you have stated,
I haven't contacted GEVO yet on how I would go about purchasing their fuel. Yes, I may have to order it or perhaps I could buy it from a Marina if the local Marina is a participant in the Iso-Butanol fuel program. I do expect to pay more than non-ethanol gasoline but that is a personal choice on the quality of fuel I will want my car to burn, knowing all of the advantages that come with Iso-Butanol, those same shared attributes that it would have with E85 yet not needing to be blended with gasoline in any form. For the sake of this discussion, I am just pointing out there is another option and that E85, as I see it, is not as wonderful a fuel as you may make it out to be. I avoid E10 gasoline like the plague for a reason and I am not alone! I fail to see E85 being a winning fuel for the daily driver given it has a serious flaw, that being it is hygroscopic.






