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... is more environmentally friendly to produce.
Not if it's made from corn. Sugar cane is a small win. Net fossil fuel usage increases when you account for fertilizing, raising, and transporting the corn. But it keeps the corn farmers in Iowa happy, and Iowa has the first primary in the US. What, me, cynical? You bet.
Most of the ethanol in the US is made from bio waste and switchgrass...
I wrote a pretty lengthy research paper on ethanol and its viability a few years ago. Long story short is it's pretty much a break even fuel right now. It'd have around it instead of gasoline. The biggest thing it has going for it vs other forms of fuel is it requires the least amount of work to adapt our current infrastructure to support it.
This information is hard to find. The best I've found so far shows that in 2017, the US produced 10M gallons of cellulosic ethanol. The Federal mandate for cellulosic ethanol production for the year was 5,500M gallons, which we missed. Total ethanol production in 2017 was 15,936M gallons. So, in 2017, cellulosic ethanol was 0.063% of US ethanol production. In my book, that doesn't qualify as "most". I eagerly await the data supporting your comment. I'm serious. I really want to know where to find good data. If I was cynical, I'd say that interested parties are hiding it.
Sadly many of us "old dudes" remember the days at the pump "BE" (before ethanol)Tetraethyl Lead additives and catalytic converters. I suppose "Ethanol Averse" would not be far from the mark.
The Federal Government mandated Ethanol into automobile fuel as a subsidy for corn production and sold it as energy, efficiency and lower emissions. Living in SD when the change took place the Corn Council was big on pushing 100% Ethanol fuels until E85 became a reality there before it hit the US mainstream market. Interestingly enough (as several independent reports show and my Corn Council neighbor's info) it's none of the above.
Here in TX, (Thank God) non ethanol automobile fuel is still available to consumers at selective stations that can be found on
https://www.pure-gas.org/
I've run my own experimental data in my V6 Tacoma with mileage and performance and found my gas mileage(as mentioned above), power output and oil sample cleanliness, as well as spark plug deposits were improved over a 7500 mile test of "non ethanol only" gasoline vs the standard 15% additive most stations offer. Engine cylinder volumetric efficiency notwithstanding.
Say what you will but my Raptor runs real nice on the 93 octane NE fuel ....
V/R
Smokey
A lot of good info already posted, but one more thing that is valuable to know: flex fuel =/= running E85.
A true flex fuel vehicle will be able to detect and adjust engine operation for varying percentages of ethanol found in the gas tank, either through the use of an ethanol content sensor or through sensor-less software on the ECU that infers ethanol content based on fuel trims (feedback from the O2 sensors) and sometimes also inferred octane (feedback from knock sensors). The reason why this is so important has to do with the fuel chemistry differences between normal pump gas and ethanol - most importantly the difference in stoichiometric AFR. On top of this, lower percentage ethanol blends will have lower knock thresholds and will require less ignition timing advance than would be allowable on higher percentages. Since (as was previously mentioned in this thread) ethanol content of "E85" can legally vary between 51% and 85% ethanol by volume, it is extremely valuable for the ECU to know as accurately as possible the exact percentage of ethanol in the fuel system.
The challenge for the aftermarket is integrating a way to measure ethanol content of the fuel into the stock ECU and wiring harness. Usually (if not always), a vehicle manufacturer will not leave unused portions of the wiring harness just lying around the engine bay that can return data back to the ECU. So, the aftermarket has to get creative with a way to get an ethanol content sensor signal back to the ECU. Sometimes, you can substitute an ECA in place of a low-impact sensor already on the vehicle - this is how Cobb integrates the ECA into our Subaru flex fuel systems by hijacking the harness input that is factory designated for the TGV position sensors. In other applications there aren't any easy or low-impact substitutions, so other solutions are required - this drove the development of our CAN Gateway module for the R35 GTR platform that sandwiches into the main engine harness to add a CAN-based ECA (and other configurable sensor data) into the stock wiring harness.
What solution will pan out to be best for the Raptor/F150 platform is still unclear, but it's definitely a long term goal for us as a company. The use of a sensor-less system definitely has its appeal to avoid the implementation challenges described above, but tends to have a significantly larger margin of error in terms of inferred vs. actual ethanol content - not great when trying to extract the most safe power out of your engine.
In the short term, for those looking to take advantage of the power benefits and low fuel costs of ethanol, here is what I recommend (and am doing with my personal vehicle): buy a "standalone" ethanol content sensor from a company like Fuel-It that uses bluetooth to communicate with your phone. Then, work with your tuner to develop a few calibrations to switch between based on the measured ethanol content shown by that sensor. Our software can easily be used to generate calibrations for E10, E20, E30, E40, E50, etc., with as much resolution of ethanol content as you may want. If you fill up with a half tank of "E85", and your ethanol content sensor shows that the final ethanol content passing through the fuel lines is 48%, you can quickly reflash to your E50 map. If the sensor reports 33%, you can flash to the E30 map; etc. With short 30-60 second flashes with the Accessport, the bluetooth ethanol sensor, and quality calibrations from your tuner, you can effectively make your truck into a flex fuel vehicle right now. Hopefully in the future, we can make things even easier.
Hope this helps to clarify some of the ethanol lingo!