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#1
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I just moved to cincinnati and curious about the status of ethanol in
the autofuel in the area. Is there a web site that shows what cities and/or counties that have ethanol in their autofuel? Are there any airports in the Cincinnati area that sells autofuel? Thanks Dave |
#2
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http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/steo/pub/special/oxy2.html shows the areas
that require oxygenated gasoline, which means ethanol these days. It's a bit hard to decipher because some areas listed in table 1 are now exempt according to table 3. However this is NOT a complete list. You better test your fuel using the simple method described on Petersen's website. noname wrote: I just moved to cincinnati and curious about the status of ethanol in the autofuel in the area. Is there a web site that shows what cities and/or counties that have ethanol in their autofuel? Are there any airports in the Cincinnati area that sells autofuel? Thanks Dave |
#3
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![]() BTW due to the phase out of MTBE, these days chances are pretty good that ethanol is ONLY found in areas where oxygenated gasoline is required, or in states where ethanol is mandated in gasoline. The reason is supply and demand. Since the phase out of MTBE began this year there's a big shortage of ethanol that drove up the already subsidized ethanol price to something like 50c above wholesale gasonline price. It'll be hard to image any oil company blending ethanol into gasoline in aeras where ethanol isn't absolutely mandated. M wrote: http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/steo/pub/special/oxy2.html shows the areas that require oxygenated gasoline, which means ethanol these days. It's a bit hard to decipher because some areas listed in table 1 are now exempt according to table 3. However this is NOT a complete list. You better test your fuel using the simple method described on Petersen's website. noname wrote: I just moved to cincinnati and curious about the status of ethanol in the autofuel in the area. Is there a web site that shows what cities and/or counties that have ethanol in their autofuel? Are there any airports in the Cincinnati area that sells autofuel? Thanks Dave |
#4
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I am based in El Monte (KEMT). I notice in Los Angeles area, the
effective period is from Oct. 1 to Feb. 29. I know the only sure way is to test before fill up. But does that mean no ethanol need to be added from March 1 to Sept. 29? M wrote: BTW due to the phase out of MTBE, these days chances are pretty good that ethanol is ONLY found in areas where oxygenated gasoline is required, or in states where ethanol is mandated in gasoline. The reason is supply and demand. Since the phase out of MTBE began this year there's a big shortage of ethanol that drove up the already subsidized ethanol price to something like 50c above wholesale gasonline price. It'll be hard to image any oil company blending ethanol into gasoline in aeras where ethanol isn't absolutely mandated. M wrote: http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/steo/pub/special/oxy2.html shows the areas that require oxygenated gasoline, which means ethanol these days. It's a bit hard to decipher because some areas listed in table 1 are now exempt according to table 3. However this is NOT a complete list. You better test your fuel using the simple method described on Petersen's website. noname wrote: I just moved to cincinnati and curious about the status of ethanol in the autofuel in the area. Is there a web site that shows what cities and/or counties that have ethanol in their autofuel? Are there any airports in the Cincinnati area that sells autofuel? Thanks Dave |
#5
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In article . com,
"noname" wrote: I just moved to cincinnati and curious about the status of ethanol in the autofuel in the area. Is there a web site that shows what cities and/or counties that have ethanol in their autofuel? Are there any airports in the Cincinnati area that sells autofuel? A member of EAA 174 called around to the autofuel distributors in the Cincinnati area a year or two ago and reported to the membership which stations added ethanol and which stations didn't. Check eaa174.org. Post the question and see if anyone responds. BTW... EAA 174 will meet Sunday, July 16, 2PM, Clermont County Airport, HAWK Building. |
#6
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![]() is there a requirement in Ohio to label the pumps if there is ethanol added. I recall that that is a requirement in a few states. |
#7
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In article .com,
"noname" wrote: is there a requirement in Ohio to label the pumps if there is ethanol added. Yes, there is. |
#8
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![]() As far as EPA is concerned that's true. However the state of California might have additional ethanol blending requirements. You can easily test this at a local pump next time you gas up your car. wrote: I am based in El Monte (KEMT). I notice in Los Angeles area, the effective period is from Oct. 1 to Feb. 29. I know the only sure way is to test before fill up. But does that mean no ethanol need to be added from March 1 to Sept. 29? |
#9
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![]() That honestly isn't very useful unless the law also prohibits those "CYA" labels that say the gasoline "may" contain ethonal when there isn't any. In Seattle area I see a lot of labels saying that the gas *may* contain up to 10% ethanol, where in fact that the Seattle metro area has been exempt from using oxygenated gasoline by EPA since 1996! Blending ethanol is a costly procedure for the oil companies and they have no reason to do it unless it's mandated by law. john smith wrote: In article .com, "noname" wrote: is there a requirement in Ohio to label the pumps if there is ethanol added. Yes, there is. |
#10
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I just checked an Exxon station on the north side of town and there was
no ethanol in the gas and there was no label on the pump either. YEA!!! $3.00 a gallon looks a lot better than 4.00+ a gallon. M wrote: That honestly isn't very useful unless the law also prohibits those "CYA" labels that say the gasoline "may" contain ethonal when there isn't any. In Seattle area I see a lot of labels saying that the gas *may* contain up to 10% ethanol, where in fact that the Seattle metro area has been exempt from using oxygenated gasoline by EPA since 1996! Blending ethanol is a costly procedure for the oil companies and they have no reason to do it unless it's mandated by law. john smith wrote: In article .com, "noname" wrote: is there a requirement in Ohio to label the pumps if there is ethanol added. Yes, there is. |
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