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- Jun 19, 2024
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What are some good fuel additives for flex fuel up to about e50?
Stabilisers, upper cylinder lube?
Stabilisers, upper cylinder lube?
Whenever someone mentions it, I always wonder what is it in the upper cylinder that isn't being lubed and needs the additive?
There's a bunch of products out there, some are the usual snake oil solvents (Lucas fuel treatment) , some are corrosion-inhibitors (Sta-bil), and some are essentially very thick oils (Klotz Uplon, Power Plus Top Lube).What are some good fuel additives for flex fuel up to about e50?
Stabilisers, upper cylinder lube?
No. Is that worse? Is the alcohol less lubricating than octane?Hundreds of thousands of miles on e85?
Yes, very much so. Probably a main reason that alcohol fuels accelerate wear.No. Is that worse? Is the alcohol less lubricating than octane?
Interesting. I would have thought all short chains would be somewhat close. Gasoline is a poor lubricant too but fuel injectors don’t benefit from additional lubrication.Yes, very much so. Probably a main reason that alcohol fuels accelerate wear.
At risk? No, I assume that if a vehicle is sold as an FFV it's engineered with ethanol-aware OLM/OCI and better filtration.Interesting. I would have thought all short chains would be somewhat close. Gasoline is a poor lubricant too but fuel injectors don’t benefit from additional lubrication.
So that means any flex-fuel vehicle is at risk here ?
These are additives specifically for alcohol fuels, not the regular fuel system cleaner products (usually just a high dose of solvents and/or PEA). They dissolve into ethanol just fine, that part isn't really in question.Every owners manual I've ever seen for a flex-fuel car says not to use any fuel additives with E85, only use them with regular unleaded. I'm sure that the additives are designed to dissolve into a petroleum product, not alcohol.
Industry standard for effectiveness or largest number of testimonials?Is there an industry standard upper cylinder lube for ethanol fuels?
Kind of like an equivalent to Techron.
Ones which work will be fine thankyouIndustry standard for effectiveness or largest number of testimonials?
Is there an industry standard upper cylinder lube for ethanol fuels?
Kind of like an equivalent to Techron.
No additive is going to "get rid of water" in an ethanol-laced gasoline. At best the additive increases the quantity of water held in solution where you don't see it. It still gets carried through the engine.The study I remember showed the best lubricity (i.e. lowest CoF) at E10, with friction increasing as E% went up, as well as with increasing water content (ethanol is hygroscopic). I'll see if I can find it again. I think the additives that are sold as stopping the reaction from water contamination are almost certainly a scam though, even PF debunked this years ago.
No additive is going to "get rid of water" in an ethanol-laced gasoline. At best the additive increases the quantity of water held in solution where you don't see it. It still gets carried through the engine.
Thanks!Techron we know to be effective since PEA is well-proven.
https://motoiq.com/top-lube-for-e85/2/
The ones mentioned there are the heavy oil type, I've seen shops using those (power plus, klotz, redline, etc.). Not really clear if they do much besides quiet down injectors. I think best practice is a good in-line fuel filter and pump gas every few fill-ups.
The Gulf Western two stroke oil?I use TCW-3 in a 600:1 ratio. Good top end lube for the E and it removes carbon. 14gal fillup gets 3oz. E30.
Yes, additives can't save a motor that only does short trips and never gets up to temp.Thanks!
You know she blew that engine right?