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«-- Letter Re: Advice on Police Department Trade-In Guns | Main | Notes from JWR: --» Running Chainsaws on Ethanol, by Brian in Wyoming
One of my hobbies is muscle
cars and I have friends that are drag racing fanatics so I am around
engines that run on ethanol weekly. Here is what I have learned, If an engine
is
carbureted and runs on gasoline then it can be converted
to run on ethanol (corn liquor). First off a little info on ethanol, it is
any distilled spirit
in its pure form. Everclear is ethanol, its just expensive due to the alcohol
tax the government imposes. Now the ethanol you buy has been denatured so
as to make it poisonous to drink and therefore can not be taxed as spirits.
Ethanol
like gas burns readily under a flame but not with as much energy as gasoline.
It burns clean and very dry with almost no reside after it is burned. It
also loves to mix with water so making sure you store your ethanol in a sealed
container is super important otherwise you will have to re-distill the spirit
to remove the water. So here is the deal, you can not just pour ethanol into
your gas tank and make it work but it is not that hard for a person with
basic mechanical knowledge. First you need to figure out what parts of your
fuel system is not ethanol friendly. This is usually the hoses as the ethanol
will eat it in short order, I recommend soaking all parts of the fuel system
in ethanol for a week to see if anything is affected. Once you know that
your fuel system will handle it you can move onto the carburetor. Ethanol
contains about 30-40% less stored power then gasoline per unit [of volume].
This is why flex fuel cars get fewer miles per gallon on E85 than
pure petrol. This means that you will need to add that much additional fuel
to make ethanol reach the correct
air/fuel ratio that internal combustion engines love. On a car this means
that you need to up the jet size to add more fuel. I usually run a 38-42%
increase in my engines but your mileage may vary based on elevation and engine.
So cars are easy since it is just a simple jet change but other things are
a little more difficult like say chainsaws or small motorcycles. These will
usually only have a small amount of jets available to compensate for elevation
changes and not nearly enough change for the ethanol conversion, so you will
have to improvise. You can buy a couple standard jets for the particular
carb you are working on, then measure the opening in your current carb and
add the 38% to the hole size and drill the jet out with the proper size drill.
Once this is done you can reassemble the carb. Now based on the burning characteristics
of ethanol you will need to advance your engines timing to the range of [spark
plug ignition] 20 [degrees] before
top dead center (BTDC) to 45 [degrees] BTDC, again you
will
have to experiment with this
because I have found that it varies widely based on what that particular
engine likes. This is easy on a engine like a cars which is made to be adjusted
but can be a huge pain on a smaller engine that has its timing set without
adjustment. This is where you will have to investigate your personal engine
and see how the timing is set. All engines have a "trigger" that
tells it when to spark, to advance that you just have to trick the trigger
into firing earlier by modifying the mounts or moving the spark trigger.
On a single cylinder engine this is easy since there is only one "trigger" and
that is usually based off the crankshaft, but again that varies by engine.
That is it, test the fuel system, bigger jets, and advance the timing and
now your engine will run on 100% pure ethanol. 1.) Use only uncontaminated ethanol-producing sugars. Otherwise--with wood, for example--you'll run the risk of making methanol, which is toxic for consumption and causes blindness. 2.) Copper flashing to prevent lead contamination from any soldered pipe joints in the still 3.) General boiler safety (including pressure relief valves) to prevent boiler explosions 4.) In the United States, BATFE licensing is required if any ethanol produced that will be sold for sipping. And presumably the portion sold for use as fuel must first be denatured. 5.) Tightly capped containers for your finished product, since ethanol is highly hygroscopic--it rapidly absorbs moisture from the air. 6.) Most gasoline engine fuels tanks and fuel systems are not suited to alcohol. This one reason that I recommend buying "Flex Fuel" (E85 compatible) vehicles, whenever possible. 7.) Alcohol burns with an almost invisible flame, so any leak in a fuel system can cause a particularly dangerous vehicular fire. (See this distillation safety guide as well as this piece from Backwoods Home magazine for further details.) |
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