LSchicago
Well-Known Member
Plus winter E85 is usually only 50-70%. I usually swap to 93 for my winter starts.E85 is not a cold weather start fan... it make take a couple tries... after that, you are good to go...
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Plus winter E85 is usually only 50-70%. I usually swap to 93 for my winter starts.E85 is not a cold weather start fan... it make take a couple tries... after that, you are good to go...
Winters here in FL are a joke... Christmas day can be a sunny 75 degrees lolPlus winter E85 is usually only 50-70%. I usually swap to 93 for my winter starts.
Do you think it would be a safe bet for peace of mind to just upgrade to the 47lb injectors even with the stock intake manifold?on a gen2 you are ok is you are running your stock intake manifold, if you upgrade to +18, gt350, etc, you need bigger injectors.. that's why i needed the 47 lb ones. You don't need anything else.
Not quite as consistently warm as Hawaii. Florida does have it's cold days.Winters here in FL are a joke... Christmas day can be a sunny 75 degrees lol
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You don't need to.... but IF you do, you know you can always upgrade your intake manifold and and won't need injectors lolDo you think it would be a safe bet for peace of mind to just upgrade to the 47lb injectors even with the stock intake manifold?
probably 2 weeks out of 52... and it's not cold cold like up northNot quite as consistently warm as Hawaii. Florida does have it's cold days.
Being cold up north has it's advantages. It bought my supercharger this year.probably 2 weeks out of 52... and it's not cold cold like up north
Is it really this risky running E85? The risk reward ratio doesn't really make sense given how many people run it.I would say it’s worth it until you get a bad batch. Then it’s boom to the engine. So power adder wise yes. Otherwise stick with 93. It’s way more consistent.
Basically you have 2 kinds of tunes, with Lund anyway (for now). You have a dedicated E85 tune and a flex tune. The dedicated E85 tune will require 75% to run properly. The flex tune allows the PCM to adjust to the percentage of E. Technically the Flex is suppose to be a transition tune from pump to dedicated E85 but you can run it all the time if you want.Is it really this risky running E85? The risk reward ratio doesn't really make sense given how many people run it.
I have a good station near me. This fill up tested at 89%. Never less than 75% through fall.Basically you have 2 kinds of tunes, with Lund anyway (for now). You have a dedicated E85 tune and a flex tune. The dedicated E85 tune will require 75% to run properly. The flex tune allows the PCM to adjust to the percentage of E. Technically the Flex is suppose to be a transition tune from pump to dedicated E85 but you can run it all the time if you want.
The only "risk" is running a dedicated E85 tune with less ethanol percentage than mandated by the tuner. I dont know that if you run 60% on a dedicated E85 tune, that you will necessarily go "boom". You actually begin to run rich when you run less E on a dedicated E85 tune. Ideally you want to check the percentage when you fill up just to make sure but my pump has always been solid and I dont rag on my car much, so I usually just roll and check on the occasion. Its worked fine for me for 4 years.
Someone please fact check me here if I am missing something.