Quote from: kinder on August 05, 2014, 10:00:54 PM
There are several portable octane testing instruments available out there. last I heard they were about $7-1000.
Just saying that if you are gonna play the mixing fuel game with your car maybe it is a worthy investment?
http://www.shatox.com/index.html
http://www.zeltex.com/portable/zx-101c.html
There is more than one way to skin a cat.
Dicking around testing fuel while I'm filling up just sounds like a terrible way to keep my car from smelling like fuel. I am guaranteed to spill fuel on myself.
Anyhoo, it occurred to me tonight that the car might help us figure this out, if you know your average and/or WOT LTFT's on straight 93 and a blend....
Comparing average LTFT's on straight 93 as a baseline to now at approx e-43 (calculated with Torque, msds sheets, receipts and a the online E-85 calculator), I know my car is enriching at an average of 14% on both banks. By average I mean the trim #'s I see most of the time after the ECU adjusts to a new blend.
100 percent E-85 requires around 30% more fuel so working backwards this puts my blend at 46.6% . So 3.3 % higher than my figures. I feel this is a reasonable margin of error since I haven't always been 100% accurate losing a receipt from time to time soooo some of my existing percentages may have been a little off when doing the calculations.
I'd like to recalculate this with WOT Trims but would require me to run the corn out as somehow I never noted my WOT trims on 93(derp). Since my tuner will be arriving soon, I probably need to do that anyway, so i can get to whatever baseline Mr. Torrie suggests.
Of course, I could be completely wrong in my thinking.