angel
Enthusiast
- Messages
- 2,542
- Location
- Athens, Greece
I had heard some years ago that some european countries (Sweden, for sure, and Netherlands maybe?) had started making E85 (85% bio-ethanol, the rest petrol) available to motorists. A lot of vehicles, including 2CVs and R4s have been using E85 since then.
That kind of fuel is no newcomer, it had been available for many years in Brazil (up to 100% ethanol) and the United States, too.
But what puzzled me, was this one: http://www.franzose.de/de/News/PaName-E10-der-stark-diskutierte-Kraftstoff-Wir-sagen-Haende-weg- , and also a discussion with a customer (Triumph owner), who told me that in the UK, where pure petrol has been replaced with E5 (and soon E10), a lot of British classics owners are having trouble with plastic and rubber parts disintegrating from not being compatible with ethanol...
So I searched the French R4 club forum and found this one: http://www.r4-4l.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=7010&p=10 . As far as I can understand, besides E85 being widely available in France, their main problem is fine tuning the R4 engines to E85...absolutely no compatibility problems.
So my question is, why should our fuel system parts be incompatible with 5% or 10% ethanol, while holding up well with 85% ethanol?
Has anyone among us any experience with E85 on an R4? I would be very interested to run an R4 on E85, when, and if, this kind of fuel will be available in my country.
That kind of fuel is no newcomer, it had been available for many years in Brazil (up to 100% ethanol) and the United States, too.
But what puzzled me, was this one: http://www.franzose.de/de/News/PaName-E10-der-stark-diskutierte-Kraftstoff-Wir-sagen-Haende-weg- , and also a discussion with a customer (Triumph owner), who told me that in the UK, where pure petrol has been replaced with E5 (and soon E10), a lot of British classics owners are having trouble with plastic and rubber parts disintegrating from not being compatible with ethanol...
So I searched the French R4 club forum and found this one: http://www.r4-4l.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=7010&p=10 . As far as I can understand, besides E85 being widely available in France, their main problem is fine tuning the R4 engines to E85...absolutely no compatibility problems.
So my question is, why should our fuel system parts be incompatible with 5% or 10% ethanol, while holding up well with 85% ethanol?
Has anyone among us any experience with E85 on an R4? I would be very interested to run an R4 on E85, when, and if, this kind of fuel will be available in my country.