Guys,
I work with fuel, a lot. I work with the CSA on producing fuel handling specifications, and I regularly deal with CAN/CGSB standards on fuels. If you don't know what those are, please look them up.
This thread has a number of partial truths and some complete falsities. Let me try and clear the air as quickly as I can.
- Ethanol adds octane to gasoline.
- Ethanol is a hydrophilic, meaning it likes water.
- Gasoline is hydrophobic meaning is does not like water.
- Gasoline can be blended with ethanol to achieve the advertised octane rating (remember this!) but also makes it able to absorb more water.
Gasoline is produced to a specific standard and it is very, very dry. Dry fuels, amongst other things, have a tendency to absorb moisture from the atmosphere. Gas tanks "breathe" with changes in temperature and the fuel volumes expand and contract with the heating and cooling cycle. This process brings in fresh, moist air.
Unblended gasoline can already hold dissolved water, but when blended with ethanol the ability to hold water is increased. At a certain level of saturation, ethanol blended fuels can hold no more water, and the ethanol/water mixture will literally drop out of suspension (phase separation) to the bottom of the tank. This leaves you with a corrosive cocktail at the bottom of your tank and decreased octane gasoline floating above it. This is bad. The fuel pickups are also on the bottom of your tanks meaning that this mixture will undoubtedly be ingested by your engines.
So, in summary. Ethanol blended fuels are FINE as long as you are not storing them for ANY LENGTH OF TIME! Storing ethanol blended fuel in a moisture rich environment is inviting problems. That said, some heavy users believe the use of ethanol blended fuels is actually a good thing in boats that are
regularly used as it can hold more dissolved water resulting in less free water at the bottom of their fuel tanks. For most of us weekend warriors ethanol blended fuels are going to sit, tank vents open, absorbing moisture from the air, creating problems.
If you're a weekend warrior like me, pay a bit more at the pump and avoid ethanol blended fuels. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, right?
Points for consideration:
Q. Fuel stabilizer will prevent the absorption of water into fuel
A. No. Fuel stabilizers are used to prevent the chemical decomposition of gasoline into an unusable state. It cannot change the actual properties of the fuel.
Q: Higher octane fuels burn hotter
A: No, they do not. In fact higher octane fuels burn slower when combusted. Octane is a measurement of a fuels resistance to detonation or knock, not its MJ/kg (in short terms, energy). This is important in higher compression engines like the example above.
Q: Fuel filters will remove all water from fuel
A: Most water can be caught by an inline fuel filter in addition to particulates. I recommend the Racor line of inline spin on fuel filters from Parker. The ones with the reusable clear bowls allow you to see if there is water being picked up from your tank. Most retail fuel dispenser have 10 micron filters in them, so the use of 10 micron is what I would personally use.
I hope this helps clear the air about octane and ethanol blended fuel.
Cheers,
Shaun