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Quote from: luckyman on July 15, 2017, 05:00:43 AMAfter rebuilding or replacing several small engine carburetors I went to non ethanol ONLY in small engines.I have a car that has the average mpg screen, it always stay at 24.5. I tried the ethanol free in it to see how it ran since the price is higher then premium. It right away jumped to 16 and stayed there through a few tanks. Didn't seem to run any better that I could tell. After returning to ethanol blend it went down to 24.5 where it normally is.That's because production vehicles have spark timing set for use with ethanol fuels. Ethanol burns quicker so spark timing and heat produced by the spark are all set to ignite the alcohol not the gas. If I remember correctly you would need to open the plug gap and retard the ignition point to see the difference. Otherwise you get partial ignition leading to poor mpg.Sent from my LG-K425 using Tapatalk
After rebuilding or replacing several small engine carburetors I went to non ethanol ONLY in small engines.I have a car that has the average mpg screen, it always stay at 24.5. I tried the ethanol free in it to see how it ran since the price is higher then premium. It right away jumped to 16 and stayed there through a few tanks. Didn't seem to run any better that I could tell. After returning to ethanol blend it went down to 24.5 where it normally is.
I have a huge inventory of motorized equipment for our business, we used to have trouble every year with engines of all types, autos, chainsaws, lawnmowers, weed cutters, snowmobiles, utv's, atv's, etc. We started using non-ethinol fuel about 8 years ago and putting startron in during storage. Another thing we do with most carburetored small engines is turn off the fuel and run the engine until the carb runs out of fuel and the engine quits. This combination of preventative actions has eliminated almost all our problems and has saved us a small fortune in mechanic bills.