Personally, I tend to buy my E85 in winter, in the middle of winter.
because at that moment, it contains up to 40% gasoline, it makes starting easier and there is more energy per liter.
Curiously, the price of E85 is not indexed to its gasoline content.
In the middle of summer, there is normally a period when we are at 15% gasoline at the pump.
E85 in a fuel boiler, risk over time?
Re: E85 in a fuel boiler, risk over time?
I was mainly thinking about cleaning the system, a bit like when I removed the GO pipes to put them in a 5L can of oil from the stoves of the same name, in order to clean the injection of the old diesel...
I haven't had a fuel boiler for a long time, it was an idea like that....
I haven't had a fuel boiler for a long time, it was an idea like that....
0 x
hmmmmm, hmmmmmmmmmmmmm, hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhmmmmmmmmm, huh, hmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
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Re: E85 in a fuel boiler, risk over time?
Remundo wrote:Personally, I tend to buy my E85 in winter, in the middle of winter.
because at that moment, it contains up to 40% gasoline, it makes starting easier and there is more energy per liter.
That's to say? Do you store it in a container at home for the summer?
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Re: E85 in a fuel boiler, risk over time?
sicetaitsimple wrote:Remundo wrote:Personally, I tend to buy my E85 in winter, in the middle of winter.
because at that moment, it contains up to 40% gasoline, it makes starting easier and there is more energy per liter.
That's to say? Do you store it in a container at home for the summer?
absolutely. You need full cans, tightly closed and opaque.
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