FiveLeeter918
Ortiz Performance Sales
combustion temps are lower for E85, which will make your exhaust temps cooler. Will this have a positive effect on the intake track as you are spinning 20,000 rpm? it's minimal.
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I see what your saying. But you exhaust temp will not drop to 700 degrees. Your exhaust temp will still be insanely high regardless of fuel used. You still have friction heat from turbines spinning and air still being compressed which will heat up, still have hot oil running though the turbo. You intake temp change would be negligable at best. But I would love to see sm do his thing and see real world results.
just to correct, our turbos are coolant filled, not oil filledBut carry on...

Yeah but 90% of the heat in the engine is produced by the fuel being burned.... if your fuel is being burned at half the temp then everything is gonna drop.I see what your saying. But you exhaust temp will not drop to 700 degrees. Your exhaust temp will still be insanely high regardless of fuel used. You still have friction heat from turbines spinning and air still being compressed which will heat up, still have hot oil running though the turbo. You intake temp change would be negligable at best. But I would love to see sm do his thing and see real world results.
Let me pull some customer datalogs and see how they compare...
Lol i do sometimes. Again. E85 burns at like 700degrees and 91 burns at like 1500 degrees. Make your own decisions based of that
just to correct, our turbos are coolant filled, not oil filledBut carry on...
Yeah but 90% of the heat in the engine is produced by the fuel being burned.... if your fuel is being burned at half the temp then everything is gonna drop.
I could have sworn back when I was originally reading about e85 years ago the aussies were saying their IAT was like 20 degrees cooler with the e85 than 110octane, they also said it has highly superior knock resistance and due to these qualities they were able to switch cars from 110 to e85 and run 10-20psi more boost
You wouldn't want the fuel to burn at half the temp though, hot turbos tend to run better as the air velocity can stay higher while warm. If your turbo somehow managed to run 800 degrees cooler than its supposed to, there would be a noticeable power difference and I think it would be less rather than more.
discovered another coincidence maybe? Coolant temp average is 207 on 93 vs 200 on e85
I know...i know....small difference. Ambient temp was 92 on both days
I'd like to know where those numbers are coming from too. I won't provide my source since it might trigger some individuals. Let's just say it rhymes with prickipedia. But Prickipedia lists the adiabatic flame temperature of ethanol and gasoline at 3779°F and 3880°F respectively.Please show me the data on that. I have a hard time believing there is a 800 degree difference in EGT....
Lol i do sometimes. Again. E85 burns at like 700degrees and 91 burns at like 1500 degrees. Make your own decisions based of that
I'd like to know where those numbers are coming from too. I won't provide my source since it might trigger some individuals. Let's just say it rhymes with prickipedia. But Prickipedia lists the adiabatic flame temperature of ethanol and gasoline at 3779°F and 3880°F respectively.
I have been looking as well. However I did find this article. It was pretty interesting. E85 and 93 run in the same set up with EGT monitored. There were some good questions posed after the results, however I dont see a massively huge change.
https://e85vehicles.com/e85/index.php?/topic/4181-does-switching-to-e85-lower-egts/
Should have checked my source, it said e85 combustion temp was 700, I see now thats ignition temp not combustion tempI'd like to know where those numbers are coming from too. I won't provide my source since it might trigger some individuals. Let's just say it rhymes with prickipedia. But Prickipedia lists the adiabatic flame temperature of ethanol and gasoline at 3779°F and 3880°F respectively.
That's very interesting indeed. We need more guinea pigs