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OT- Ethanol efficiency study

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MSD

12-11-2007 07:21:34




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Here is a link to a new study on the efficiency of Ethanol. Link




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JSharp

12-13-2007 10:24:23




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
I saw that "study." Giving that it was sponsored by the ethanol lobby, I don't think it's coincidence that it's making increased mileage claims. So far it seems to be the only one that's doing so. Go figure.

Maybe I was too harsh before though. They may not be lying exactly. More like they're just using some numbers from the wildly inaccurate EPA mileage tests to prove their point. It's not their fault I suppose. And darn, everyone else is using them too.
You can call me a doubter. And I'll probably keep doubting, right up until the the EPA starts using actual measured fuel consumption figures instead of calculating mileage from exhaust emissions. That technique has been shown to be ridiculously inaccurate time and time again when used on vehicles with very low emissions...

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TWJanak

12-12-2007 16:17:42




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
Link



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TWJanak

12-12-2007 16:16:26




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
Maybe this will shed some light:

http://enews.penton.com/enews/cornandsoybeandigest/corn_edigest/2007_12_10_december_12_2007/display



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JSharp

12-12-2007 11:21:11




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
I too wonder how people are getting better mileage with ethanol considering these numbers -

Ethanol energy content = 75,700 Btu/gallon.

Gasoline energy content =115,000 Btu/gallon.

I'll pick the simple answer until I have another - Someone is lying...



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TomTex

12-12-2007 07:15:55




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
After we pump all the water tables out growing all the corn, maybe then we will have to drink ethanol, the water will all be gone. Tom



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Tradititonal Farmer

12-12-2007 07:32:51




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to TomTex, 12-12-2007 07:15:55  
You might be on to something.Have you bought a bottle of water lately?More expensive than gasoline.



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Tradititonal Farmer

12-12-2007 04:09:48




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
In a cpaitalist system such as ours here in the US if its a good economical idea it will flourish on its own.If on the other hand it is a Dead in the Water looser the gov't has to underwrite with Taxpayers money.Ethanol has so far fallen into the later catagory



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MarkB_MI

12-11-2007 19:18:16




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
The article, coming from the corn state of Iowa, seems to play fast and loose with what the study actually found.

First, it quotes an unamed study saying that "doubling or tripling the amount of ethanol usually blended into gasoline improved mileage for three of four cars tested." Only later in the article does it mention that this study was "sponsored" by the government and the American Coalition for Ethanol. (ACE is an ethanol lobbying group.) Sorry, but I can't place a great deal of faith in a study run by a lobbying group and the (highly political) DOE without a few more details of how the study was conducted.

The second study by the Pardee Rand grad school would seem to be a little more objective. Here's an excerpt from what USA Today said about the Rand study:

'Anything's better than ethanol blend E85, even ordinary gasoline, a new cost-benefit analysis of alternative fuels by researcher John Graham at the Pardee Rand Graduate School finds.

'Diesels scored highest, surprising even the researchers. "We were kind of expecting that hybrids would outperform diesels when we went into the study. It's close, but the advanced diesel" provides better performance and fuel economy for the price, he says.

'Compared to gasoline, a driver could spend as much as $1,600 more on fuel over a vehicle's life burning E85, a mix of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, Graham calculates, while a diesel could save as much as $2,300.'

Hardly an enthusiastic endorsement of ethanol.

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cornfarmer

12-11-2007 17:30:14




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
Mentioning ethanol is always going to "stir the pot". Facts tend to get ignored when passion takes over. First, even after corn is used to make ethanol, significant food value is left so the food or fuel argument is really overblown. Also, ethanol is an oxygenate, which can have a synergistic effect on combustion efficiency if your vehicles computer is capable of exploiting it. Corn based ethanol will never be able to meet our total energy needs, but it is a valuable addition that is available NOW, not 10 or 20 years into the future. Unbiased studies (and you really need to read the methodology for each) show a significant net energy gain from ethanol. And last, but maybe the most significant, what every ethanol naysayer ignores, is the social cost of crude oil. A large part of our Mideast policy is geared to supply cheap crude to fuel our economy. To be fair to ethanol, we must charge a significant portion of our military expenses, and many lives, to the cost of a gallon of gas. In fact, please study history-Standard Oil of California (SOCAL) loaned Saudi Arabia the money used to continue the practice of paying the various tribes for the loyalty to Ibn Saud after the collapse of the British Empire, until SOCAL could develop the Saudi oil fields and oil revenues began to flow freely into the kingdom.

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phillip d

12-11-2007 15:50:26




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
Ethanol is made of food.Be it for corn flakes,corn startch,pop corn,corn pops and on and on.It is also the mainstay in cattle diets,which produce milk and beef for us to drink and eat,there for food again.The plants can't stand on their own without heavy government subsidies.There just isn't enough return,1 dollar's worth of corn in for 1.6 in fuel out.Not counting production costs.It is driving the price of cattle feed up yet again,fertilizer also at a time when the livestock industry is in trouble already.On the other side it is helping the grain industry incredibly.Brazil is making fuel out of sugar cane with a 10 to 1 return.When the government stops subsidizing the ethanol plants,unless the price of fuel keeps going up rapidly,they will go broke.Maybe they will find a way to make fuel out of hamburger,bread,fish,and even water.Who needs to eat when we can drive?

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730virgil

12-11-2007 20:35:55




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to phillip d, 12-11-2007 15:50:26  
why aren't you talking about the subsidies the goverment gives to big oil? it makes what ethanol gets look like knat on a mountain.



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phillip d

12-12-2007 08:47:48




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to 730virgil, 12-11-2007 20:35:55  
I can't imagine why oil companies are not able to stand on thier own.I never would have thought they were subsidized ;(



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rodgernbama

12-11-2007 15:17:37




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
I"m all about ethanol for the reasons you stated.(money spent locally, not sending it to the Arabs.) Most people I talk to won"t even mind paying a little more for ethanol rather than send it to the Middle East and to Chavez. My biggest concern is if it"s made from corn what will happen to market price and all associated products.(ie cattle,corn flakes, etc).



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Dean Barker

12-11-2007 11:35:19




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
With a carburetor equipped car, I could always expect a reduction in mileage when using 10% ethanol. With a fuel injected car, I haven't seen a difference between the two. A reliable check with a flex fuel car between E85 and E10 showed the cost per mile to be the same with E85 @ 45 cents less than E10.



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farmertwo

12-11-2007 09:27:08




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
If the USA could keep from fighting for oil to keep the economy going, and save lives, I dont care if I get less gas mileage, whether it be 10-30 percent less. You know what I would like to do with Iraq's oil if I could. We are going to pay whether it is ethanol or oil, why not ethanol?



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onefarmer

12-11-2007 08:49:15




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
The question of e85 isn't "Does it get the same milage as gas?" but "Is it a viable replacement for gas? And how do we get the most out of it? If the US could no longer get oil from other countries, can we sustain ourselves using other forms of fuel?
If we used biodiesel, alcohol, hydrogen, and solar could we keep going?



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rrlund

12-11-2007 09:38:49




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to onefarmer, 12-11-2007 08:49:15  
The country is going to have to live the way people in general used to live...diversification. A combination of resources. A different source of energy for different purposes. For example,we could save natural gas by following Frances example and using nuclear power to generate electricity. Nuclear would also free up coal for the purpose of gassification. We don't do it for the same reason people don't raise a large garden,keep a hog to butcher,a cow to milk,a steer to butcher...we don't have to.

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onefarmer

12-11-2007 11:01:19




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to rrlund, 12-11-2007 09:38:49  
Completely agreed and we don't have to ....yet!



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rrlund

12-11-2007 15:02:25




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to onefarmer, 12-11-2007 11:01:19  
Agreed



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Walt Davies

12-11-2007 08:04:17




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
I really wonder about that study its goes against every known thing about using Ethanol. When used in Indy cars it get only 20% as much mileage as Gasoline does. When we did a study using small pickups at Fort Ord with E-85 we used almost as much gasoline as we would have using just straight gas.
Now all of a sudden they have cars that get better mileage just doesn't seem possible to me but then I'm no expert on this and haven't use any of the ethanol blends.
Walt

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Iagary

12-11-2007 14:36:12




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Walt Davies, 12-11-2007 08:04:17  
Walt are you a farmer in any way?

I didn't know anyone out there had not tried or is not using ethanol.

Think about what the price of gas might be if all those gallons of ethanol were not used.

I've never noticed any differance in milage between 10% ethanol and straight gas.

It burns cleaner than gas also.

Gary



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36 coupe

12-12-2007 03:13:30




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Iagary, 12-11-2007 14:36:12  
You have to ignore the fact that ethanol has far less BTUs than gasoline.Cant remember the figures.



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Walt Davies

12-11-2007 15:15:04




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Iagary, 12-11-2007 14:36:12  
I raise cattle and I live in an area where we don't have the E-10 or other ethanol blends. I guess we are a little backwards out here the Oregon country. Hey we don't even have to have our vehicles tested for emissions.
I was just wondering how it went from real bad mileage to better than gasoline what did they do to make this work. My experience with it was that it was not a good choice because of the poor results.

Walt

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MSD

12-11-2007 13:51:32




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Walt Davies, 12-11-2007 08:04:17  
I think what they were saying was that with E85, there was no improvement and even a drop in mileage. I've been hearing this from guys with flex vehicles also. With E10 the mileage was about the same as regular. This is what I always found with my vehicles. With E20 or E30 there was an increase in mileage. They went on to say that "nobody knows for sure why but maybe the extra oxygen and octane allows the engines to burn more of the available energy" and therefore better mileage. My brother has been running E30 on up to E50 in his Crown Vic. He always brags about the mileage he got with it. It finally gave out at 400,000+ miles so I don't think Ethanol hurts a motor in any way.

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Goose

12-11-2007 07:52:25




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to MSD, 12-11-2007 07:21:34  
I can do my own ethanol efficiency study right in my car. It's an Olds 88 with a digital dash and driver info display. If you push the right button, it will read out average fuel mileage.

Tank for tank, it consistently gets 3 mpg less on 10% ethanol than on 87 octane regular. Since 10% ethanol is added to the gasoline, and I get approximately 10% poorer gas mileage burning 10% ethanol, I'm still burning the same amount of gasoline to cover the same number of miles.

I know this isn't what the corn farmers, our own renter included, want to hear, but what is the ethanol industry actually accomplishing?

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paul

12-11-2007 18:51:14




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Goose, 12-11-2007 07:52:25  
Goose, a 10% blend is there for 2 reasons - adding octane to the fuel, & making it a somewhat cleaner burning fuel (the ethanol boosts the O2 in the burning process, which reduces some bad pollutants, tho it does slightly raise some mild pollutants.)

It has little to do with adding to milage. Your fuel would cost more, OR it would pollute more, without the E10. Some engine configurations do the same, some do a bit worse on E10. You happen to have one of the 'worse' models. But on the whole, many do the same for milage, and so there is some small boost in energy supply. But really not the point of E10 - it's for octane & air quality.

E20 or E30 the fuel likely burns in a smoother, even front, & the engine becomes more efficient. Even tho it has less btu to work with, the increased efficiency allows it to gain mph.

E85 engines are designed primmarily as gasoline engines, which can burn up to E85. Thus they are optomised for gasoline, & loose mpg on E85. If they were designed specificly for E85 with higher compression & other refinements they could easily keep up with a regular gasoline engine on mpg. Ethonal burns more smoothly like a diesel engine, a strong long burn front with good power. Gasoline explodes in one bang, slapping the piston with a strong short blast. The high octane could be used with much higher compression, which always makes a more efficient engine.

However, we get to the chicken & the egg - no one will buy an E85 only vehicle uless there are thousands of pumps; and no one would put up thousands of pumps unless there were dedicatd cars to use the stuff.

So, the current compromise of E85 flex vehicles, hopefully it will mature the industry and get both the chickens & eggs out there. No they are not the most efficient, because they are not optimised for all the strong points of ethanol fuel. A dedicated E85 engine would show a lot of positive energy from the whole ethonal equasion. If we could get there?

As to food vs fuel, every bu of corn going to ethonal still produces 17+ lbs of animal feed gluten. Here in Minnesota we export 1/2 of our corn crop out of the state. Even with the ethanol plants we have. I'm pretty happy to have local buyers. Depending on the Missisppi river to thaw, or the rail cars to haul grain trains across the Rocky Mountains makes for _very_ low grain prices here. Any local sale is a good thing, I'm happy to keep the grain & the jobs associated with it local. No shortage of food or feed 'here'.

Compared to the 1960's, corn should sell for $7.00 off the farm if it kept up with other basic staples. It just crossed $4 today for me. Sure has a ways to go yet before it is 'high priced'. Much of the increase in grain prices is from the cheap dollar - our grain looks cheap to other countries, even if it looks high to some of us within the USA. The Asian Rim is growing rapidly & importing grains when it used to export. Their production of grain has not kept pace - their efforts have been on industrial expansion. Soon they will refocus on ag production, and again will be exporting. This is just an ebb & flow.

Penty of room for differing opinions, and ethanol fuels are not all honey & roses. Don't mean to imply it is the savior of all problems.

It is, tho, I believe, a stepping stone?

--->Paul

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26Red

12-11-2007 10:15:43




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Goose, 12-11-2007 07:52:25  
They are providing an alternative to oil.

It is not a perfect solution, but it is better than nothing.

I hope that the industry(farmers and refineries) will grow and improve it"s production processes to the point were it is economical to run E85 or E100 instead of gas.



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Jack a

12-11-2007 07:56:35




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Goose, 12-11-2007 07:52:25  
They gotten their fingers in the pie. That's what they accomplished.



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MSD

12-11-2007 14:03:19




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 Re: OT- Ethanol efficiency study in reply to Jack a, 12-11-2007 07:56:35  
There are 2 large Ethanol producers in our state. They have plants also in different states. They are producing or are at near to producing over a BILLION gallons of Ethanol per year each. Archie Daniels also produces this much. I wonder how many tankers of Saudi crude that amounts to. Plus those gallons produced here give dollars to the farmers who spend there money in town. I know several of the guys who have helped build their plants. That money stayed local. Even if the cost are the same, why send it to the Arabs. I just don't understand why some people are so against Ethanol. How big do you suppose Exion Mobil's profits will be this quarter? I don't see any of that money showing up locally.

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