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About Us
E 85
Tech
is owned by
Web Spinners, LLC who also provide
the secure hosting of this site and
content. E 85
Tech
started
in 2010 as the first public Ethanol Pumps came into our
region of Pennsylvania. After trying the product
on a company vehicle and learning more of the
industry, I decided to buy into and promote this
American Made Industry.
We can all do our own
small part for less than $300 and help America
move to cleaner fuels and less foreign oil. The
PERFORMANCE boost for
Hot-Roding was/is a personal
bonus!;-) -Michael
Davis
Installation Help
It is BEST to check your
connector type by unplugging one and compare it
to this picture or have your mechanic do so if
not a self install. You can also use
NAPA Auto Parts Online store search to find
the Fuel Injector for your particular car.
Connector Types
Why Did My Kit
Come With The Male Connectors Unattached ?
The Harness on
your
E85Tech
Conversion Kit has been shipped to you with the
male connector unattached. The reason for this
is that there are many variations that the
Vehicle Manufacturer has used to configured the
polarity of the fuel injectors. We have seen
these variations on same year, make and model
vehicle's with the same V.I.N. and engine size.
This is a very
simple procedure and requires no mechanical
skills or expensive equipment. You will notice
that when you view all of your vehicle’s fuel
injectors on your engine that there are two
wires per fuel injector.
One wire is
constant power that is delivered by the key on
ignition switch power. This wire is always the
same color as the power wire on all the other
fuel injectors. Your first step is to find the
common colored wire on your vehicle's fuel
injectors. All fuel injection system use a
common colored wire for power and a multi
colored wire for ground pulse.
We then recommend that you
plug the empty male connector into the Vehicle’s
female connector with no wire attached. Follow
the common colored fuel injector wire ( power
12V+ ) through the connector and then mark the
cavity in order to insert the Red wire male
terminal so it will then mate with the common
colored wire of the fuel injector power source.
After you have achieved this, you can then
insert the multi-colored wires into the
neighboring cavity in the male connector.
Red Wire :
Our Red wire on the E85 kit
is to be inserted into the male connector cavity
that matches the power wire on the vehicle’s
original female harness. Remember the power wire
is the common colored wire of the two wires seen
on your vehicle’s original fuel injector harness
connector.
Multi-colored
wire:
The Multi-colored wire is to
be inserted into the male connector cavity that
matches with the vehicle’s original ground pulse
wire.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:
Does my engine have to be
in perfect condition? My vehicle has a lot of
miles on it; is it too worn out?
A successful ethanol
conversion should start with a car that has been
properly maintained and is
in good working order. High mileage is generally
not a barrier so long as the car runs well. We
have customers who have converted high mileage
cars with well over 200K miles and their vehicle
runs great on ethanol. But if your car is
burning a lot of oil, has poor compression, runs
poorly or
is hard to start, those issues need to be
addressed before attempting conversion.
I have an older car with
high mileage. It runs well, but what things
should
I check to make sure they are OK?
Rubber – If your vehicle is
old enough, it may have rubber components in the
fuel system. We
have found that if your
vehicle was manufactured after 1990, it is
probably free of rubber in the
fuel system. If you are converting an older
vehicle, you will likely need to replace the
fuel line and
the fuel pump with modern components. If your
vehicle is newer than 1990 and it looks like it
has
a rubber fuel line, it is most likely made from
neoprene. Neoprene looks like rubber but it is
not
reactive to ethanol and is fine.
Fuel Pump – The fuel pump
needs to be delivering adequate pressure and
flow. Stock OEM fuel
pumps generally deliver
plenty of fuel for your engine even with it
running E85. If your vehicle
can currently run well at full throttle, your
fuel pump is probably in fine condition and will
probably not need replacing.
Fuel Filter – Gasoline
contains olefins and waxy paraffin like
compounds. Fuel vendors add
detergents to try and keep
these in suspension but there is a tendency for
them to deposit onto the
surfaces of your fuel system. Over time, the
inside of your fuel tank can become lined with a
mixture of these compounds. Ethanol is very good
at mobilizing these deposits and a few tanks of
E85 will do a good job of cleaning them from
your fuel system. They burn well, especially
when
mixed with ethanol, and will not harm your
vehicle to be removed from your fuel system in
this
manner. The trouble is that these waxy compounds
may also have been securing sediments to the
bottom of your fuel tank. When these sediments
are no longer secured, they will find themselves
picked up by the fuel pump and into the fuel
filter where they will start to obstruct the
flow of fuel.
This problem is most common when budget fuels
have been used over a long period of time but
most fuel filters are relatively easy to change.
If you think you are a likely candidate for this
issue,
we recommend using your first few tanks and then
changing the fuel filter as a preventative
maintenance item rather than experiencing a
problem when you are in a remote area.
Oxygen Sensors – Your vehicle
will have one or more oxygen sensors. The oxygen
sensors enable
your vehicle's computer to properly trim the
fuel. The ability to adjust the fuel trim is
standard on
all modern fuel injected engines and it is
crucial that this system be working properly. If
your car
is running well on gasoline, your oxygen sensors
are probably OK. Occasionally we have seen
some older sensors get soft with age and use.
If, after conversion, your engine runs well on
mixtures up to about 50% ethanol but you are
having difficulty with higher concentrations of
ethanol, the problem may be due to oxygen
sensors that are not responding as they should.
If you
suspect you may be having this trouble, you can
check the electrical response of the sensor.
While
it is usually not necessary to do so, oxygen
sensors are easily replaced should you
experience this
issue.
What model of converter do I need?
This will depend upon the type of fuel injection
system you vehicle uses and the number of
injectors it has. The following are descriptions
of each of these types. The one that matches
your
vehicle will determine the model of conversion
system you will need. If you have questions,
please
contact our technical support for assistance.
Standard 12V Multi Port – Most
vehicles fall into this situation. Locate the
injectors and examine
the connectors. You may need to remove one from
the injector to make a match as the outer
appearance will vary. The important
consideration is the configuration of the mating
parts. If
you are having trouble determining a match, send
us a digital photo of the mating end of your
connectors and we will help with the
identification. It is also important to verify
the polarity of
your car's injector wiring. Each connector has a
relatively standard way that it is wired but
some
vehicles have it the opposite direction. The
easiest way to do this is to examine the color
code of
the injector wires going to several of your
car's cylinders. There will be a pair of wires
going to
each cylinder's injector and one wire from each
set will usually have the same color code. This
will be the positive wire. If you cannot find a
color code in common, you will need to use a
volt
meter on the wires. The injection system can
usually be energized by turning the key to the
on
position. One of these wires will show a +12V
potential over the chassis or negative battery
terminal. Note which side the positive wire is
on when looking at the face of the female
connector
as shown in the photos.
Buried injectors – late model
V-6 engines will usually have the injectors
buried under the air
plenum. Some plenums are easy to remove and some
are much trickier. If you have a complicated
air plenum removal situation, you may wish to
opt for the hardwire installation as the
injector
wires are generally easy to access.
4V injection – We have
discovered that a few injection systems on
European models use 4 volts
instead of the usual 12. We have only
encountered this system on some Volvo and Audi
models
but are unsure if there are any others that also
use 4 volt injectors. We are investigating a
solution for this but our 12 volt converters
will not work on these injection systems. If you
have a
4 volt injection system and would like to be
notified when we have a solution for you, please
Email
us.
Do I need to run special oil, or change it more
frequently?
You should always use a grade of oil that meets
or exceeds the engine manufacturers
recommendations. There is nothing about the
nature of E85 that would normally require
special
oils or to change them more frequently. If your
driving habits are hard on oil, then you should
use
a high grade oil and/or change it more
frequently.
One of the things that can cause oil to require
changing is a buildup of contaminants. The oil
filter should always be changed at every oil
change and that will help to keep particulate
contaminants out of the oil but chemical
contaminants will still accumulate. These
contaminants
come from the blow-by. During the power stroke,
hot combustion gases will leak past the rings
and valve seals. These gases are allowed to
escape the crankcase through the PCV system but
the
oil will trap many of the chemicals that are
present in these gases. For example, sulfur in
the fuel
will form sulfur oxides. These will gradually
build up in the engine oil. When an engine is
first
started and not yet warm, water vapor from the
combustion will also enter the crankcase and
condense on the cold surfaces. The sulfur oxides
combine with the water to form sulfuric acid.
The ethanol part of E85 has NO sulfur or any
other elements that would form harmful oil
contaminants, so using E85 should reduce the
rate oil becomes contaminated with such things.
Grit from the intake air can also enter your
crankcase with the blow-by. Your choice of fuel
will
not change the amount of grit that is in the
intake air. You should change your air filter
when
recommended or more frequently if you operate in
dusty dirty conditions.
Oil dilution is rare, but can occur if an engine
is running excessively rich. If your engine is
in
good working order, this will not be a problem
whether you are using gasoline or E85. Vehicles
from 1996 will have level 2 on board diagnostics
that will detect a rich condition and alert you
with a check engine light.
Oil can breakdown due to heat and pressure
between bearings. Converting a vehicle to E85
can
significantly increase its performance
potential. If you make a habit of using this
extra
performance, you are placing your engine into a
situation which will more quickly cause the
engine oil to loose its lubrication. Note that
this does not require street racing. If you find
that
your SUV is able to pull your boat up the
mountain pass 10 MPH faster than before, you are
spending an extended period of time with your
engine at or near full-throttle. This is hard on
ordinary oils and if you read most owner's
manuals, the manufacturer would classify towing
as
hard service and recommend more frequent oil
changes.
What do we use in the FFI Hummers? These
vehicles are using a full synthetic oil.
First, the increase in fuel efficiency will
often pay for the difference in the cost of the
oil.
Second, we want our vehicles to stay in top
shape and last a long time.
Third, while we don't drive like maniacs, we do
pull trailers and use these vehicle's off-road
capabilities and want an oil that will keep the
engines lubricated properly. We think it is a
good
investment.
I've heard that E85 will harm my engine. Is this
true?
A definitive answer is, “it depends”. The 1973
oil embargo caused fuel shortages and prices
rose
dramatically. This spurred America to find both
alternatives to gasoline and ways to extend the
fuel supply. One thing that was noticed was that
an engine could burn a mixture of alcohol and
gasoline and the resulting product was called
gasohol. There were a few problems that were
encountered. First, the alcohol that was
typically used was wood alcohol or methanol.
Methanol
is much more corrosive to many common materials
than is ethanol and unfortunately most of the
vehicles that were on the road in the 1970s were
not designed to have alcohol in the fuel.
As a result, gasohol had a short duration on the
market but congress was determined to reduce
America's dependence upon foreign oil. Tax
incentives for the production of ethanol were
established and there were several executive
orders to use gasohol in the vehicles that could
safely
utilize it. In 1982, another fuel shortage
occurred and it was obvious that alcohol blended
fuels
were coming. The manufacturers changed the
engineering of the vehicles to be more
chemically
compatible with the presence of alcohol in the
fuel.
Ethanol is a much better alcohol to use for fuel
than methanol. For most materials, it is less
corrosive, it has considerably more energy, and
is also far less toxic. For several years, it
has
been common to blend ethanol into the gasoline
supply. E10, a mixture of 10% ethanol and 90%
gasoline is available at many vendors. Blending
a couple of percentage points of ethanol into
the
gasoline is not only common practice, but in
many areas it is being required.
What we have found is that if your vehicle was
manufactured in 1990 or later, the fuel system
and
engine were most likely made with materials that
are not sufficiently reactive to ethanol to be a
problem using E85. If you have an older vehicle,
you will need to investigate whether or not the
fuel system can use ethanol. The most common
material that was a problem is rubber. If you
use
E85 in a vehicle with rubber fuel system
components, they will deteriorate fairly quickly
and fail.
This could cause fuel leaks
and result in a significant risk of fire. If in
doubt, older vehicles
should have their fuel lines and fuel pumps
replaced. Most auto parts stores should be able
to
supply you with the parts necessary to make this
change.
Do I have to change my
injectors?
We have found that the stock OEM injectors on
late-model engines work fine with E85. Unless
you are building a race car and need a high
performance injector, the ones your engine
already
has should be OK. Ethanol is also an excellent
cleaner and works to keep the injectors, fuel
rails,
and valves free of deposits, so you also do not
have to have your injectors cleaned. The ethanol
will do that for you.
Do I need to change my oxygen
sensors:
If your engine is running fine on gasoline, your
oxygen sensors are probably working well and you
should not have to change them. Sometimes these
sensors can be degraded through age and use
and will not respond as well as they should. In
this unlikely event, your engine's computer will
have difficulty making proper fuel trim
adjustments. If you convert to E85 and find that
your
engine runs fine with ethanol mixtures up to
about 50% but has difficulty with 85%, the
problem
may be due to soft O2 sensors. A mechanic can
diagnose whether this is the cause by examining
the electrical response of the sensors. If an O2
sensor is found to not be responding as it
should,
they are easy to replace.
Are there any other sensors that need to be
added or replaced?
All of the sensors that your vehicle was
equipped with need to be in good operating order
if your
engine is to perform as it should. Some factory
flex-fuel vehicles added an alcohol sensor to
allow
the computer to determine the alcohol content of
the fuel but that practice was discontinued by
all
of the manufacturers of factory flex-fuel
vehicles. Our conversion system does not require
you to
add any sensors. All computer controlled fuel
injection systems monitor the oxygen sensors to
determine if the proper fuel to air mixture has
been achieved and will adjust the fuel trim to
achieve the proper ratio. This allows the engine
to adapt to varying fuel grades and prevents the
engine knocking that was so common with the
carburetor based systems. Our converter extends
your engine's built in ability to trim fuel. By
extending this fuel trim range, our converter
allows
most vehicles to use any mixture of gasoline and
ethanol without requiring any manual
intervention.
What is the octane rating of E85?
There are, of course, several variables such as
the exact mixture of ethanol in the gasoline and
the
grade of gasoline used but E85 should result in
an effective octane of approximately 105. It is
very resistant to pre-detonation (knocking) and
works very well in high compression engines.
How much will my MPG be affected?
There are a lot of variables here. Ethanol has
less chemical energy per gallon than gasoline.
It
burns more efficiently however, so while you
will get fewer miles per gallon, you will get
more
miles per BTU. The increase in the burn
efficiency will partially offset the difference
in the energy
levels of the two fuels.
Driving habits have a large impact on fuel
economy. Running on E85 generally results in a
noticeable increase in performance. If you make
a habit of using the extra performance, you
should not expect it to have a positive effect
on your MPG.
This is definitely one of those “results will
vary” situations. Our customers have reported
MPG
differences generally ranging from 5% to 20%
lower for E85 than when running on gasoline.
Other than driving habit changes, the most
common factor seems to be that the higher the
engine's
compression ratio, the less the mileage loss. We
have customers who claim their Toyota Prius will
get essentially the same mileage on E85 as it
did on gasoline.
If you are driving conservatively in an average
car, you will probably see a 15 to 20 percent
loss
in mileage. If you are on the high end of the
MPG loss of approximately 20%, then to achieve
the
same cost per mile, you should look for a 20%
price differential between gasoline and E85. If
the
regular grade of gasoline is selling for 3.00
per gallon, you need a 60 cent differential in
price
and would look for E85 selling for 2.40 or less.
In areas where E85 is readily available, there
is
often more than a 60 cent difference in the pump
price.
Due to the high octane rating of E85
(approximately 105), it is an excellent
alternative to buying
premium for high performance engines. Premium is
often 20 cents or more above the price of
regular. If your engine needs premium,
converting to E85 will be an even more
attractive option.
Can I use pure ethanol?
In the US, the answer is no unless you want to
pay the beverage tax. The highest concentration
of
ethanol that the US allows in fuel grade ethanol
is 98%. The other 2% is gasoline, thus rendering
it unfit for drinking but doesn't really change
it's combustion characteristics. In 2007, the
Indy
500 used this fuel. It has an octane of 120 and
the performance you can achieve is phenomenal,
especially in high compression, turbo, or
supercharged engines.
It is difficult to find E98 for retail sale but
is the concentration that will be loaded onto
trucks
when the ethanol leaves the production facility.
If you don't want to brew and distill your own
fuel, you will need to talk to an ethanol
distributor or blender to obtain E98. If you are
running a
race car and are paying for 105 octane gasoline,
you will want to take a serious look at
converting to E98. With this high an ethanol
content in your fuel, you will want to adjust
your
converter to a higher setting, probably in the 8
to 10 range. This will enable easier starting
and
maximum power.
For the average individual running an ordinary
vehicle, the performance difference between E85
and E98 is probably not worth the trouble but
with our conversion box, you can do so if you
wish.
We have tested E98 in both of our Hummers and in
a 2003 Dodge Dakota with a 4.7 liter V8. The
power increase is remarkable but remember, you
didn't upgrade your transmission... Driving
hard is hard on the equipment.
I've heard that it can be hard to start your
vehicle on E85 in cold weather.
Some vehicles have more trouble with this than
others but in general, it is true, even of
factory flex
fuel vehicles. Most of the reason has to due
with the nature of the fuel. It is harder to
start a cold
engine on ethanol. The higher the percentage of
ethanol, the sooner this will become an issue.
One of the reasons you won't normally see a
blend of ethanol beyond 85 percent is that the
15% of
gasoline helps with engine starting. Most E85
vendors in colder climates will down blend the
product during the winter to approximately 70%
content. In fact, if you read the fine print on
some of the pumps, it will say, “Contains a
minimum of 70% ethanol.” This is a good thing
since
at 70% ethanol, cold starting issues generally
disappear.
Fuel Trim – having the correct
fuel mixture when starting is a big advantage.
Many of the newer
vehicles will remember the trim they were using
when last shut off. If you have a vehicle that
remembers its fuel trim, you will have fewer
cold start issues. If your vehicle does not
remember
its trim, it must make some average assumptions,
start the vehicle, and wait for the oxygen
sensors
to reach approximately 600 degrees before it can
adjust the fuel trim. Our CFO's 2003 Dakota is
like this and will trim its fuel in
approximately 45 seconds from a 60 degree (F)
start.
Converter adjustment – To have
the ability to run either fuel without opening
the hood and
making adjustments, we ship the converter
adjusted to 6 (see adjusting the converter).
This setting
works well for most vehicles and allows the
vehicle's fuel trim system to trim lean enough
to run
with gasoline and to trim rich enough to run
E85, just by watching the oxygen sensors. Since
E85
is not always available, it is important to be
able to do this. If you always run E85 and are
having
some cold start issues, you can adjust the
setting inside the converter to a higher
(richer) setting.
If you set it on 10, cold start problems will
probably disappear but you will also probably
get a
check-engine light with a rich condition if you
should run gasoline. If this happens, it will
not
harm your engine. Simply readjust to a lower
setting. Once the rich condition is corrected,
the
check-engine condition should clear on its own.
Why is an engine harder to start on ethanol?
Vapor Pressure – The first
difference in these fuels is that ethanol has a
lower vapor pressure
than gasoline. This means that while the
cylinder head is below the boiling point of
ethanol,
gasoline will more readily vaporize. Since there
is very little time from when the injector
squirts
the fuel to when the spark plug will attempt to
ignite it, this can make for significantly less
of the
ethanol to have turned into a vapor than would
have happened for the same amount of gasoline.
Liquid fuels do not burn. To compensate for
this, all engines will add extra fuel when
starting as
it is the fuel to air mixture OF THE VAPOR that
matters.
Carbon-Carbon Double Bonds –
Gasoline ignites more easily than ethanol. There
are
fundamental differences in the physical
chemistry of these fuels. In order to start and
then
maintain a combustion chain reaction, you must
have fuel as a vapor well mixed with oxygen and
have sufficient kinetic energy (heat) in the
molecules to destroy the existing molecular
bonds in the
fuel and reform bonds with the oxygen. Double
bonds are easy places for an oxidizer to attack
a
fuel molecule. Because the double bond is easy
to attack, it lowers the energy required to
break
the first bond when a fuel contains a double
bond. Additionally, when conditions for
combustion
are marginal, the presence of double bonds in
the fuel will enable combustion when it would
otherwise not occur.
Gasoline – Gasoline is mostly
a mixture of various alkylates, all of which
contain a double bond.
This prevalence of double bonds in the molecules
of gasoline results in a low flash point. It is
easy
to ignite and is not very picky about the
fuel-to-air mixture in order to maintain
combustion. Of
course clean combustion requires a correct
mixture, but to have combustion at all (and get
the
engine started) you need only be remotely close.
Ethanol – Ethanol, C2H5OH, has
no double bonds whatsoever. There is no easy
attack point.
For an oxygen to steal away any part of this
fuel, it has to have significant energy or it
will fail to
break any of these bonds. Because of this, in
order to have combustion, the conditions for
must be
closer to ideal than for gasoline with its
abundant double bonds. Even with 15% gasoline,
E85
has a much lower concentration of double bonds
and is therefore harder to ignite. Increasing
gasoline content to 30% provides an adequate
concentration of double bonds to assist in
sustaining combustion when conditions are poor.
This is why you will often see a 70% blend
during cold winter months.
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