Thread Starter
#1
This should be the most important topic today, and every petrol head should worry seriously about this. Open your car manual and look into it and find out what fuel the manufacturer recommends.
I bet it E5 or E10.
Petrol mixed with 20 percent ethanol (E20) was rolled out on 6th february 2023 at select petrol pumps in 11 states and union territories as part of a programme by Government of India.
Benefits:
1) Increase use of biofuels will cut down on emissions which are responsible for Global warming,melting glaciers,unhealthy earth.
2) Decrease in dependence on foreign exchange-draining imports of fuel.
At present, 10 percent ethanol is blended in petrol (10 percent ethanol, 90 per cent petrol) which is called E10, and the government is looking to double this quantity by 2025.That will be called E20
Ethanol, often known as ethyl alcohol or alcohol, is a type of biofuel with the molecular formula C2H5OH. It is produced naturally through sugar fermentation. It is mostly produced in India during the sugarcane extraction process. However, it can also be produced using other organic material, such as grains of food.
Drawbacks:
Our car and 2 wheeler engines are simply NOT ready for that fuel!!
BS4 onwards engines can take E10 fuel safely. Beyond that ethanol will surely damage engine and pipes,fuel lines,hoses etc.
So far the fuel supplied is E10. Soon it's going to be E20 fuel everywhere.And I don't think we as owners are at all prepared for that. Then all cars, including new ones sold now, will suffer badly. What to do? I am all for green earth and clean environment,but I also love my car very much. It will be very painful for me to see my car dying just like that,not because of accident but because of want of pure petrol !!
Fuel filter changing more frequently won't help at all. It's going to go through the fuel filter to everywhere in the engine, till it gets burned out from the exhaust, damaging whatever rubber and plastic it encounters along the way. Especially if that rubber and plastic was not designed to handle E20 fuel,which actually at present ,is not, in 99% of cars on road, including those that are sold now.
So basically our cars (and the owners too) are sitting ducks, and before we know it, E20 will enter our petrol tanks too.
I bet it E5 or E10.
Petrol mixed with 20 percent ethanol (E20) was rolled out on 6th february 2023 at select petrol pumps in 11 states and union territories as part of a programme by Government of India.
Benefits:
1) Increase use of biofuels will cut down on emissions which are responsible for Global warming,melting glaciers,unhealthy earth.
2) Decrease in dependence on foreign exchange-draining imports of fuel.
At present, 10 percent ethanol is blended in petrol (10 percent ethanol, 90 per cent petrol) which is called E10, and the government is looking to double this quantity by 2025.That will be called E20
Ethanol, often known as ethyl alcohol or alcohol, is a type of biofuel with the molecular formula C2H5OH. It is produced naturally through sugar fermentation. It is mostly produced in India during the sugarcane extraction process. However, it can also be produced using other organic material, such as grains of food.
Drawbacks:
Our car and 2 wheeler engines are simply NOT ready for that fuel!!
BS4 onwards engines can take E10 fuel safely. Beyond that ethanol will surely damage engine and pipes,fuel lines,hoses etc.
So far the fuel supplied is E10. Soon it's going to be E20 fuel everywhere.And I don't think we as owners are at all prepared for that. Then all cars, including new ones sold now, will suffer badly. What to do? I am all for green earth and clean environment,but I also love my car very much. It will be very painful for me to see my car dying just like that,not because of accident but because of want of pure petrol !!
Fuel filter changing more frequently won't help at all. It's going to go through the fuel filter to everywhere in the engine, till it gets burned out from the exhaust, damaging whatever rubber and plastic it encounters along the way. Especially if that rubber and plastic was not designed to handle E20 fuel,which actually at present ,is not, in 99% of cars on road, including those that are sold now.
So basically our cars (and the owners too) are sitting ducks, and before we know it, E20 will enter our petrol tanks too.
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