diss1dent wrote:
It doesn't have to be everywhere (don't get me wrong, it would be great if it was!)
I would love to put it everywhere but getting it into existing stations is near impossible as the big boys have control over them. Our plan is unmanned tanks with credit card payment facilities at motorsport venues and with each site being at least 90K to set up we have to be selective.
Should hopefully be able to put one in Christchurch for ya at some point. Make sure you do the survey as the areas that get these tanks first will be the ones who express the most interest and are deemed to be the most viable.
Lith wrote:In terms of the cold starting - can you be more specific? How cold, or what kind of starting issues should one consider "reasonable" on E85?
Cold starting issues arise as ethanol has a high latent heat of vaporisation (about 2.5 times that of petrol) and high flash point.
The flash point of a substance is the minimum temperature at which it will begin to vaporise. Petrol has a flash point of <-40 degrees, pure ethanol is 13 degrees and E85 is <-15 degrees. As the temperature increases between the flash point and the boiling point the volume of vapour produced in a given time period increases.
When the fuel vaporises is consumes energy equal to the latent heat of vaporisation and cools the air, this is why ethanol fuels ensure the intake air charge is cooler and denser. You can actually feel this phenomenon when you get fuel on your hand.
In an engine environment there are several factors that help to vaporise the fuel; ambient air temperature, compression and the heat in the engine itself. The issue is that there is only a limited amount of each and the fuel is consuming a portion of the energy as it is produced.
So in piratical terms, on a cold morning there is very little energy in the air or engine parts to permit the fuel to change state so it relies on heat from compression and spark to get it going. The result of this is that you need to crank the engine a lot more to build up heat in the engine and provide the required energy for vaporisation.
I have found that in most circumstances you can almost eliminate this problem through good tuning and you can definitely reduce the problem. The ideal is to ensure that the fuel map is leaner on a cold start, worst case scenario is the fuel that doesn't manage to change state can build up and essentially flood the engine.
We are in the process of testing an additive that acts as a combustion catalyst and will hopefully resolve or at least substantially reduce this problem.