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-   -   Whats the deal with E85? (http://www.mitsustyle.com/forums/showthread.php?t=31907)

Mark Leasure 08-08-2012 08:13 AM

Whats the deal with E85?
 
I have noticed that the E85 around Eagan/Bloomington/Burnsville Holiday stations is reading around E79??? Anyone else notice low content percentages around the metro?

scheides 08-08-2012 08:18 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Basically we're getting effed I think. Been that way all summer:

http://mitsustyle.com/forums/showthread.php?t=26283

effint stupid.

munchgsx 08-08-2012 09:29 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
I noticed that the blend switched about a month ago. I did have some good stuff for about a month though.

Mark Leasure 08-08-2012 09:46 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
I have never seen E84 like last summer. Not once, it's always been E79-80.

Kracka 08-08-2012 11:08 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Crazy...blenders are leaving some profit on the table with blend rates like that.

goodhart 08-08-2012 11:09 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Hughes do you think it has anything to do with the big corn shortage this summer?

Kracka 08-08-2012 11:23 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by goodhart (Post 411391)
Hughes do you think it has anything to do with the big corn shortage this summer?

No; ethanol production still exceeds demand. There is no corn shortage yet, the shortage will begin once the current crop comes off the fields. The market price of corn is high enough to cause demand destruction so ethanol will continue being available and won't be going away in the near future.

Murlo26 08-08-2012 11:39 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kracka (Post 411396)
No; ethanol production still exceeds demand. There is no corn shortage yet, the shortage will begin once the current crop comes off the fields. The market price of corn is high enough to cause demand destruction so ethanol will continue being available and won't be going away in the near future.

Yep this...the drought this year is going to own corn prices coming forth, it has already. I drove through nebraska yesterday and corn fields were super dry and they were just short little guys. I guess Indiana area is getting it the worst.

Now that corn is free market, I don't see many people using it compared to before as now its just us (the car enthusiasts) and the people that use it to be "green"...which is mainly government vehicles.

Kracka 08-08-2012 11:44 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
The corn conditions made me cry driving up from TX last month :( Basically mid-OK until northern-IA was completely destroyed. Some farmers had already cut their crop, and others just torched their fields.

tpunx99GSX 08-08-2012 11:51 AM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
I watched a story on KARE 11 about the chicken farmers wanting the gov to stop the ethanol subsidy because there wont be enough corn to feed their chickens, and they showed a guy talking but in the background jessica sneared at him because it was a factory farm and not free range. and she made the comment, "If he would move to a free range method he wouldnt need as much corn to feed them as a lot of it is wasted due to the chickens trampling and shitting on their feed."
Saw a story even earlier about the price of milk going up because of corn shortage, to which i say STOP FEEDING THEM CORN and use grass instead.

Halon 08-08-2012 12:39 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
I thought ethanol only used a part of the corn, allowing farmers to still use the unused portion to use as feed.

tehehodi 08-08-2012 12:46 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Only the starches and sugars from corn's seed, or kernels, are used to make corn ethanol. After they ferment in water and enzymes, the liquor is distilled to produce ethanol. Cellulosic ethanol draws from an entire plant, which may be corn, sugar cane or other local crop. The majority of American ethanol is corn ethanol, which uses only the corn kernels.

Read more: What Part of the Corn Plant is Used to Make Ethanol? | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/facts_7507085_pa...#ixzz22yhFEpyR

JET 08-08-2012 01:00 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Yes, the leftover part is called DDG or Distiller's Grain. You can't feed at a 100% ratio to cows, but last I heard they were going 50% of it. My brother is a pretty big farmer (1400+ acres) and he said the goverment totally fudged the numbers for the planted acres of corn this year. That coupled with the drought is going to lead to a monstrous shortage.

If you have some extra money to invest, get some corn! I went up to Grand Forks last weekend and they appear to have been flooded in all the spring rains we got, their stuff is green, but most is not close to normal height. It was pretty dry around Alexandria area too for about 20 miles, 1/2 of the fields looked dead.

Kracka 08-08-2012 01:01 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by tpunx99GSX (Post 411408)
I watched a story on KARE 11 about the chicken farmers wanting the gov to stop the ethanol subsidy because there wont be enough corn to feed their chickens, and they showed a guy talking but in the background jessica sneared at him because it was a factory farm and not free range. and she made the comment, "If he would move to a free range method he wouldnt need as much corn to feed them as a lot of it is wasted due to the chickens trampling and shitting on their feed."
Saw a story even earlier about the price of milk going up because of corn shortage, to which i say STOP FEEDING THEM CORN and use grass instead.

Tom, the majority of livestock is fed on a grain/grass blend depending on the season and current climate conditions. This year, due to the widespread drought, has taken a significant toll on non-irrgated grains and grass growth. This has increased the demand for the grains (including distillers grains). I know you have your opinions, but I do have good information, this is what I do day in and day out.

The American petroleum industry could not handle a widespread lift on ethanol blending requirements since it would require significant costs and time associated with retooling all the refineries since they'd have to refine differently in order to meet the octane and oxygenate requirements without ethanol.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Halon (Post 411412)
I thought ethanol only used a part of the corn, allowing farmers to still use the unused portion to use as feed.

Correct, we sell off what's called distillers grains to farmers as feed at a discount vs. corn; win-win for them and us.

Kracka 08-08-2012 01:05 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JET (Post 411414)
Yes, the leftover part is called DDG or Distiller's Grain.

DDG would be "dried distillers grains", there is also "modified" and "wet". Moisture content is approximately 12, 40, and 65% respectively.

I also want to add that American ethanol is made from not only corn, but also wheat starch and sorghum/milo. For example, only about half of my plants' production is from corn (yellow corn #2 to be exact).

EclipseGST 08-08-2012 01:32 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
We ran into huge issues with E85 on Vassil's car. Shane was tuning it last week and it was knocking like crazy at 30psi and 7* of timing which should never happen on E85. Did a fuel test and it came back at 70% The stations here in Winona are all still E70. Called the companies and they said they dont care what the ratio is as long as its at or above the minimal E70 and its actually cheaper for them to run E70 so they never changed it from the winter blend.

Pretty nice of them! Assholes!

Shane@DBPerformance 08-08-2012 02:41 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
I have been seeing a lot around 80%, which isn't much different than most years. I rarely have ever seen real 85% the last 5 years. But this year a lot of stations still seem to be on E70, which is causing some problems.

Murlo26 08-08-2012 02:43 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Shane@DBPerformance (Post 411436)
I have been seeing a lot around 80%, which isn't much different than most years. I rarely have ever seen real 85% the last 5 years. But this year a lot of stations still seem to be on E70, which is causing some problems.

Time to start mixing our own I guess :)

Actually, probably easier to rock E98...consistency ftw.

Kracka 08-08-2012 02:46 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
You guys need to buy it by the truckload and split it up yourselves, I could give you a great deal on ~7,800 gallons of E98 :)

Murlo26 08-08-2012 02:50 PM

Re: Whats the deal with E85?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kracka (Post 411440)
You guys need to buy it by the truckload and split it up yourselves, I could give you a great deal on ~7,800 gallons of E98 :)

7800 you say...what is that one train car or something?

How much per gallon? ;)

Maybe you could just "lose" 7800 gallons, like it fell off the back of a truck type thing.

We need to convince a local gas station to carry E98 I think. Like a race fuel place, then we can just go there to fill up smaller tanks and store enough for weeks at home.


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