Okay, I have no documented proof to call BS, but neither due any of the nay sayers !
- It is getting harder and harder to find ethanol free fuel these days. Checking web sites, I can not find 1 in all of SE MI. E10 is here and it is not going away (and the government is trying to ram E15 down our throats) !
- All "rubber" parts used in fuel lines and carburetors for the past 30+ years are are safe for use with E10.
- The real problem with E10 is its tendency to "clean" your tank ! Any spec of varnish or anything else will get loosened up and travel into the carb where is will plugs things up for sure. My hobby is fixing old outdoor power equipment, much of it over 40 years old. If the carb is gummed up, it is because the tank is gummed up. On small engines, my rule is clean the tank, when you rebuild the carb. I know this is difficult on old cars and boats without removing the tank, but drain the fuel, and get the tank steam cleaned in place if you have to !
My hobby is fixing old outdoor power equipment, much of it over 40 years old. Anything over 20 years old should have the fuel line replaced because it is deteriorating from age !
If the carb is gummed up, it is because the tank is gummed up. On small engines, my rule is clean the tank, when you rebuild the carb. I know this is difficult on old cars and boats without removing the tank, but drain the fuel, and get the tank steam cleaned in place if you have to !
Don't get me wrong. I don't like E10, but for other reasons
(government farm subsidies, using a food stock for fuel, cheaper for the fuel blender but not passed ob, marginally worse economy).
Now if you want to go fast and money is no object
(funny how those 2 frequently come together) design, build and calibrate your engine to
only run E85 ! The fuel economy will be terrible, but it will go fast.