E-85 compression
We had a post about E85 a few months ago. I don't think you will need a different compression ratio. Holley makes a bolt on E85 carburetor; however, it is very expensive. I have heard that after doing an E85 conversion you also have to run synthetic oil and tinker with the timing and carburetor settings to get it to run and start correctly.
We had a post about E85 a few months ago. I don't think you will need a different compression ratio. Holley makes a bolt on E85 carburetor; however, it is very expensive. I have heard that after doing an E85 conversion you also have to run synthetic oil and tinker with the timing and carburetor settings to get it to run and start correctly.
The timing and carb tinkering you refer to is probably due to the whether and the ethanal to gasoline ratio in E-85. In the summer (warmer) months they put as much as 90% ethanal in where as in colder months it may be cut down to 75% ethanal. They put more gasoline in it in the winter months for easier starting.
Last edited by CutlassSalon; Sep 6, 2008 at 02:51 PM.
I know someone who is using it in his drag car. I am pretty sure he just re jetted the carb or something like that to make it run richer. I do know that the oil has to be changed more often because it gets contaminated faster.
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