Yeah, you're good to go with e20 in the tank, indefinitely if you want. The PCM can adjust fuel trims at this ethanol content, safely and without a tune.Yes, that's exactly what I was asking. I wasn't stating it was bad, I was asking how would it be (bad)? Sorry for the confusion.
I always done that, just so I have gas at home for mower, or snow blower, depending on season. But I don't think the quart or two of maybe 87 or 91 is going to change much in a 15 gallon load of fuel.This is just a minor advantage, but take a gas can and pump a half gallon into that before filling up to get the 87 out of the hose.
This.Key for flashing back is to not do it at the pump. Bring down the tank to zero. Fill up on 93, then go driving for 5-10 miles. Then pull over and flash back to 93 tune. That will allow time for the E85 to make its way through the fuel systems, and the 93 to get to the injectors. Its not instant. So dont flash back until you have ran the car for a while on 93. And again a while means like 5 miles of driving.
This X 1,000! Spot on my experience and sentiment. Being back on 93 this past couple weeks sucks. Itās soo hard and unavailable to get, my ONLY e85 sessions so far has been on the 55 gal drum of Sunoco I picked up (to the tune of ~$8.50 a Gallon) expecting it to be a novelty and one time good deal. Now Iām not soo sure and seriously contemplating another drum for summer at least.My car just runs overall better on E85 and I'm not talking performance. Just the idle, stays cool, just feels so smooth.
Does it make that much of a difference in the butt dyno?I want my e85 baaacckkk
Holy cow!
Before going ESS I had an E85 N/A tune, and every time I switched back and forth it was a noticeable difference.Does it make that much of a difference in the butt dyno?