Camaro5 Chevy Camaro Forum / Camaro ZL1, SS and V6 Forums - Camaro5.com
 
Roto-Fab
Go Back   Camaro5 Chevy Camaro Forum / Camaro ZL1, SS and V6 Forums - Camaro5.com > General Camaro Forums > 5th Gen Camaro SS LS LT General Discussions


Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 11-08-2010, 11:00 AM   #15
SILVERHAWK


 
SILVERHAWK's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS, '22 Silverado Z71
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: The First State
Posts: 3,116
I think newer vehicles aren't really effected by the ethanol blended fuel. On my '00 Silverado I only noticed a 1-2 mpg loss when they started using the 10% ethanol blend. With the winter blend I lose about another 1-2 mpg, but I've never felt a difference in the way it runs.
__________________
SILVERHAWK is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 11:04 AM   #16
greenrail
Comic Curmudgeon
 
greenrail's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 Camaro 2SS-2010 VW CC Sport
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Near Chicago, IL
Posts: 2,392
We have 10% blended fuel here in the Chicago area year round. At least that is what is posted on our Gas Pumps here.
__________________
Member Illinois Camaro Club
His Name is Rosie - "Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick!" - If you know who said that, then you know the genesis of his name.
greenrail is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 11:33 AM   #17
pennor
 
pennor's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2LT - 73 Corvette 454
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Salem, OR
Posts: 240
Quote:
Originally Posted by TommyTSquared View Post
We have ethanol blended gas year round here :(
X2

We do too, by State law.
pennor is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 11:39 AM   #18
v6sonoma


 
v6sonoma's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 SS RS
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Providence, RI
Posts: 8,108
Quote:
Originally Posted by SILVERHAWK View Post
I think newer vehicles aren't really effected by the ethanol blended fuel. On my '00 Silverado I only noticed a 1-2 mpg loss when they started using the 10% ethanol blend. With the winter blend I lose about another 1-2 mpg, but I've never felt a difference in the way it runs.
Newer cars are fine, but my 2005 motorcycle needs it's carbs cleaned almost every year due to that crap E10 and that costs me $300 a whack. Even with using stabilizer. Now they approved E15. If they force that crap on us I'll just sell the damn thing. Also it destroyed my Weed whacker. I tried to get that going and the fuel line in the tank literally crumbled in my hand. Soooooooo pissed! :(
__________________

Mods: BBK Intake, BBK LT's and High Flow Cats, Corsa Cat-back exhaust, Hurst short throw shifter, SLP skip-shift eliminator.

7/1/09 Placed order for IOM/IO int/ SS/RS 6M
9/26/09 Took delivery!
v6sonoma is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 12:29 PM   #19
SILVERHAWK


 
SILVERHAWK's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS, '22 Silverado Z71
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: The First State
Posts: 3,116
Quote:
Originally Posted by v6sonoma View Post
Newer cars are fine, but my 2005 motorcycle needs it's carbs cleaned almost every year due to that crap E10 and that costs me $300 a whack. Even with using stabilizer. Now they approved E15. If they force that crap on us I'll just sell the damn thing. Also it destroyed my Weed whacker. I tried to get that going and the fuel line in the tank literally crumbled in my hand. Soooooooo pissed! :(
Yeah I heard that 15% crap is coming out soon. Apparently, its supposed to really screw people up who own boats the engines won't be able to deal with it.
__________________
SILVERHAWK is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 01:04 PM   #20
cab2g
love. my. car.
 
cab2g's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Chicago
Posts: 3,372
which do you think contributes more to loss in mileage? winter blend or letting your car idle for a few minutes to warm up when it's freezing cold outside? I always noticed my mileage drop during the winter, but I always attributed it to the fact that I let my truck warm up when it was below 40 degrees.
__________________
cab2g is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 01:26 PM   #21
pennor
 
pennor's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2LT - 73 Corvette 454
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Salem, OR
Posts: 240
Quote:
Originally Posted by cab2g View Post
which do you think contributes more to loss in mileage? winter blend or letting your car idle for a few minutes to warm up when it's freezing cold outside? I always noticed my mileage drop during the winter, but I always attributed it to the fact that I let my truck warm up when it was below 40 degrees.
I'll chime in on this. . .

Since we have 10% Ethanol here where I live year round it's not a seasonal thing. Further, I have only had my Camaro for 7 weeks now so I don't have much experience with the Camaro mileage. BUT, I have a 2004 Colorado which has always gotten worse mileage in the winter as did my Jeep before it. I do a lot of town driving and short trips. I don't let the vehicle idle for 10 minutes to warm it up. I drive it right away, summer and winter. Still, the mileage is worse in the winter. Here's what I suspect: I think that during colder weather the vehicle runs rich for longer because it takes longer to warm it up, especially the O2 sesnsors. When the car is cold the computer runs it in a different mode than when everything is warm. The O2 sensors don't function until they get up to temperature. I thus suspect that the car runs "choked" as we would have said in the days of carburators for a longer period of time and that dumps a lot more fuel into the system. When the air is warm in the summer everything warms up faster and the computer gets into its normal mode quicker, thus saving fuel. Anyway, this what I have suspected is going on, since the cold weather only seems to affect the computer controled fuel injected cars that I have and not the carburated ones running the same fuel in the same climatic conditions.
pennor is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 05:20 PM   #22
SILVERHAWK


 
SILVERHAWK's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS, '22 Silverado Z71
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: The First State
Posts: 3,116
Quote:
Originally Posted by cab2g View Post
which do you think contributes more to loss in mileage? winter blend or letting your car idle for a few minutes to warm up when it's freezing cold outside? I always noticed my mileage drop during the winter, but I always attributed it to the fact that I let my truck warm up when it was below 40 degrees.
I know its probably not the best thing for the motor but I never let mine warm up. First of all I love my sleep, so normally I don't have extra time in the morning. And second I have written too many stolen vehicle reports for the idiots that leave veh running unattended and some crackhead wanders by and steals it.
Now I will have to let it run sometimes when I have to clear ice or snow off of the truck but once I have to start doing that and running the 4 wheel drive I can care less about gas mileage as long as I can make it into work because I have no other choice I have to make it in no matter what.
__________________
SILVERHAWK is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 05:31 PM   #23
SILVERHAWK


 
SILVERHAWK's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS, '22 Silverado Z71
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: The First State
Posts: 3,116
Quote:
Originally Posted by pennor View Post
I'll chime in on this. . .

Since we have 10% Ethanol here where I live year round it's not a seasonal thing. Further, I have only had my Camaro for 7 weeks now so I don't have much experience with the Camaro mileage. BUT, I have a 2004 Colorado which has always gotten worse mileage in the winter as did my Jeep before it. I do a lot of town driving and short trips. I don't let the vehicle idle for 10 minutes to warm it up. I drive it right away, summer and winter. Still, the mileage is worse in the winter. Here's what I suspect: I think that during colder weather the vehicle runs rich for longer because it takes longer to warm it up, especially the O2 sesnsors. When the car is cold the computer runs it in a different mode than when everything is warm. The O2 sensors don't function until they get up to temperature. I thus suspect that the car runs "choked" as we would have said in the days of carburators for a longer period of time and that dumps a lot more fuel into the system. When the air is warm in the summer everything warms up faster and the computer gets into its normal mode quicker, thus saving fuel. Anyway, this what I have suspected is going on, since the cold weather only seems to affect the computer controled fuel injected cars that I have and not the carburated ones running the same fuel in the same climatic conditions.
I can see your point, but it hasn't gotten that cold in my area yet and its killing the mileage already. I did remember one thing in my silverado manual. It will run with different gearing either holds it in third gear uner a certain mph or higher rpms in every gear before it shifts something like that. when you first start the truck up in the freezing cold its supposed to help it warm up to optimal temp quicker but then it returns to normal once the truck is warmed up. I'm sure that effects the mileage as well to some degree.
__________________
SILVERHAWK is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 05:41 PM   #24
2010 SS RS

 
2010 SS RS's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 2SS/RS IBM Black Polished
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Colorado
Posts: 2,106
E10....E15....try converting to E85....bahahahaha. But do we really drive them for the milage? I went for a complete conversion and the 42 RWHP gain and 33 lbs of torque. Pretty cheap mod for real HP gains. And the benefit of cooler burn and more fuel to each charge is gynormous. Clearly the E10 causes loss of milage cause it takes more fuel for each charge but it really should not be as much as you might think. Additional fuel needed for Ethanol is about 30% so if blend is 10% mix then actual amount of fuel would only be 3%. So milage difference must be attributed to warm ups...and winter driving conditions...slower traffic...Cold engine and thicker oil....computer compensation due to temps etc.
Call around and you should still be able to find some service station that sells gas only premium. But I bet the price is higher and the E10 will still be cheaper even with your reduced gas milage.
__________________
418 Stroker, 621RWHP 648 lbs TORQUE Built by Laramie GM Auto Center Tuned by Nick at Mac Autosport. EForce SC, 2 3/4pulley,LPE dual fuel pump, JRE Twin fuel rail upgrade, posi clutch kit, RX oilcatch can and breather, Callies Compstar crankshaft and rods, Racing bearings, CP -13.8 race pistons, steel rings, Comp Cams X6 blower cam, Springs, HD timing chain and tensioner, Doug Thorley Tri Y LT headers, 89.7lb injectors, RPM rollbar, DSS1400 shafts, Simpson 5 pt harness, BMR Toe rods and trailing arms, led lights, RPM input and output shafts
2010 SS RS is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 08:04 PM   #25
gblaue
 
gblaue's Avatar
 
Drives: 2017 Bright Yellow ZL1 6spd
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Central MA
Posts: 660
Quote:
Originally Posted by 2010 Bumblebee View Post
I think you are right about the vaporization! Ethanol on the other hand I believe is more powerful than gasoline. It's alcohol..
Actually, Ethanol has less BTUs per unit than gasoline. Summer blend of gasoline has approximately 114,500 BTUs/gallon compare to 111,836 BTUs per gallon for gasoline with 10% ethanol.

The reason that people believe that "winter fuels" get worse gas mileage is not so much an issue anymore. Most areas are running gasoline/ethanol blends year round. The real reason is that car simply needs to run richer in cold weather. Cold air is denser and contains more oxygen, thus runs leaner. That means more fuel is needed, which in turn means a drop in fuel mileage. In addition, cars run closed loop longer during the warm up period, which means even more fuel.
gblaue is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 08:46 PM   #26
conradt
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS Victory Red
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Port Washing, WI
Posts: 30
RVP

Quote:
Originally Posted by POWERFREAK View Post
thank you tree-huggers...because of you gas is more expensive and we get worse MPG in the winter.

The difference between conventional summer- and winter-blend gasoline has to do with the Reid Vapor Pressure of the fuel. RVP relates to the volatility of a gasoline. The more volatile a gasoline, the more likely it will evaporate as the temperatures rises; evaporated gasoline contributes to unhealthy ozone and smog levels. Summer gasoline has a low RVP and is less likely to evaporate when compared to the high RVP winter grade. The Environmental Protection Agency says conventional summer-blend gasoline contains 1.7 percent more energy than winter-blend gas, which contributes to the summer blend’s slightly better gas mileage.

This is true.

I work at gasoline distribution terminal and I can tell you that there is winter gas and summer gas. We are only talking about the base product that comes from the refinory. Every spring we have to make sure we rotate our inventory and ship all of the high RVP gas before May 1 or face very stiff fines from the EPA. One year we had to sit on 2 million gallons of gas for the whole summer. You will get worse milage in the winter.

Ethanol is another story. It is always the same. We add 10% to every load wheather it is conventional gas or reformulated.
conradt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2010, 09:30 PM   #27
SILVERHAWK


 
SILVERHAWK's Avatar
 
Drives: 2011 2SS/RS, '22 Silverado Z71
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: The First State
Posts: 3,116
Quote:
Originally Posted by gblaue View Post
Actually, Ethanol has less BTUs per unit than gasoline. Summer blend of gasoline has approximately 114,500 BTUs/gallon compare to 111,836 BTUs per gallon for gasoline with 10% ethanol.

The reason that people believe that "winter fuels" get worse gas mileage is not so much an issue anymore. Most areas are running gasoline/ethanol blends year round. The real reason is that car simply needs to run richer in cold weather. Cold air is denser and contains more oxygen, thus runs leaner. That means more fuel is needed, which in turn means a drop in fuel mileage. In addition, cars run closed loop longer during the warm up period, which means even more fuel.
I hear everyones scientific reasonings and weather related reasons for loss of mileage and yes I guess people are correct Did I really buy it for the great fuel mileage?..... OK you got me I would have went back with the 6 cyl like I traded in.. BUT I am just bringing to light the fact that one minute I'm riding along getting over 17 mpg --- I stop and fill up my gas tank... once I roll back onto the hwy the car struggles to get 15-16 mpg.... EVEN AS I TRY TO BABY IT TO SEE IF I CAN ACTUALLY HIT THE 25 MPG TOP MPG RATING ON THE WINDOW STICKER JUST FOR KICKS... (ya know get it slowly up to speed then let the cruise take it on a flat open piece of hwy with no traffic lights so the AFM kicks in) I'm just sitting there going WTF? somethings not right.
Since then it has settled at around 14.4 mpg when a few days before I was around 17.6 mpg. NO COLD weather since its been just about the same temp (around 55-60) no warm ups... no change in driving habits or anything like that. Within 10 minutes time and one fill up I saw a difference Nothing else mentioned really comes into play except the difference in the oxygenated fuel.
__________________
SILVERHAWK is offline   Reply With Quote
 
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
2010 Camaro Billet Aluminum Fuel Door - Installed! Heat Metal Cosmetics and Lighting Modification Discussions 41 08-13-2012 03:55 PM
How many people will E-85 their new camaro? Speed74SS Camaro V8 LS3 / L99 Engine, Exhaust, and Bolt-Ons 57 01-03-2011 02:16 PM
Momentum Autosports: Nitrous Plate and Stand Alone fuel system done RIGHT. JordonMusser Forced Induction - V8 3 11-23-2010 06:11 PM
Why i think you cant do a Dyno in the same day 2SSRS@Gen5diy Camaro V8 LS3 / L99 Engine, Exhaust, and Bolt-Ons 123 10-22-2009 07:37 PM
Camaro ls3 news...true or false? Dark Knight Camaro V8 LS3 / L99 Engine, Exhaust, and Bolt-Ons 74 06-05-2008 05:29 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:52 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.