Dartswinger70
Well-Known Member
Fun fact if you look it up, a 70 Dart Swinger 340 got like 13 MPG when new...
IDK about all the hate for gasohol, in cars. I've been running 87E10 since 1999, nothing but, and I have had no trouble with it. Zero.
NW PA here, 35 miles from Lake Erie, it is humid here even on the best days.I have to LMFAO every time somebody tries to lecture how alky is no problemo, guaranteed they don't live where...... like here, the humidity was ~90% & 92°F a few days back.
That's where our humidity is regularly and ethanol gives no problem whatsoever in either of my carbureted vehicles. That said, all I run is the 10% max.I have to LMFAO every time somebody tries to lecture how alky is no problemo, guaranteed they don't live where...... like here, the humidity was ~90% & 92°F a few days back.
I must have the twin brother to your Ryobi string trimmer. Mine is ALWAYS an adventure to try to get it to start. Just a piece of crap. Never again!NW PA here, 35 miles from Lake Erie, it is humid here even on the best days.
Here are my facts. 12 year old Echo string trimmer. E10/87 stays in it from season to season even throughout the winter and it starts with 3 pulls every spring. Original spark plug and primer bulb. The same story is true for my 10 year old Echo leaf blower. 14 year old Toro snow blower. 11 year old Toro zero turn. 6 year old Poulan chain saw. The only piece of equipment that gives me problems is a Ryobi string trimmer but it is a ***** to start with any type of gas even now with a new carb, spark plug and fuel lines.
I also had a 70 Swinger 340 that spent 3 winters from Dec 1 to Apr 1 with 89 E10 in the carb and gas tank and it always started in the spring without any drama.
This year I switched my 66 440 Belvedere from EF 90 to E10 93 and the car performs better without any hot start problems and actually is giving me an increase of 1 1/2 mpg.
I can't explain why I don't have the problems other people have with E10 but I just considered myself lucky I guess.
Jerry
That's on an American gallon. On "real" gallons like Canada used to have that's a bit of 24mpg.I drive from Sooke to Tofino today with a couple of detours, 343 km using 39.9 L. That puts me over 20 mpg for my slant.
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Where do you get that information from?If it states it can contain up to 10 % ethanol here,,,it might actually be 15 or even 20 % here in America sometimes.
Not all of them do it,,,,but they have been caught doing this before !
Tommy
Where do you get that information from?
I hauled fuel back in 2011 here and even delivered to the Hess, now Pilot in Carthage.
Running 15-20% ethanol will give you problems in a carb engine.
Do they secretly add it at the station? No. Does the driver when loading the tanker do it? No.
It's either blended from nozzles in the stream of sub octane gas going into the tanker at the loading rack or the E100 goes in first then the sub octane fuel goes in. It's all metered and the driver has no control of the formulation.
Before I hauled fuel locally the drivers for Mapco loaded E100 into their tankers manually then went to the main rack at Cumberland fuels in Nashville and got their sub. They had to calculate how much to put in there.
Last trip to Florida I stopped in Monteagle and Pilot didn't have E10. It's all E15. I really didn't need gas and didn't want to pay their high price for 90 octane non ethanol.
Great point!That's on an American gallon. On "real" gallons like Canada used to have that's a bit of 24mpg.
mpg matter if you drive them a lot !!!
Fun fact if you look it up, a 70 Dart Swinger 340 got like 13 MPG when new...