• E85 Fuel And Your Old Car E85 Fuel And Your Old Car Nov 05, 2009 If you want to convert your American classic car to ethanol – E85, you must know that one of the rumors is that the ethanol will eat your rubber components.
  • Ethanol As Fuel Ethanol As Fuel Nov 05, 2009 Nowadays people are more and more concerned with finding alternative fuel sources for their motor vehicles. There are many alternatives on the table and sometimes it is very hard to pick one and stick with it.
  • Everything You Need To Know About Ethanol Everything You Need To Know About Ethanol Nov 05, 2009 Ethanol is a very common substance, an alcohol that has developed into an alternative fuel source. Ethanol can be produced from corn, wheat, barely, sugar cane and other cellulosic biomasses like grass and trees.
  • Getting Tax Breaks With Ethanol Vehicles Getting Tax Breaks With Ethanol Vehicles Nov 05, 2009 The alternative fuel issue is a much debated topic and the government is doing what it can to promote it. On the federal tax return paper you filled in this year you might have seen that the government is giving tax credits to people that have alternative fuel vehicles.
  • Ethanol Distillation Facts

    Ethanol Distillation Facts

    Fuel prices are going up almost every year and the market is highly instable. Wars are going on in the Arab world where much of the fuel is coming from.

  • Ethanol – Where Can I Find It

    Ethanol – Where Can I Find It

    The ethanol industry is strictly tied to the machine building industry. Nowadays many trucks, vans, SUVs and many other vehicles use a mix of gas, gasoline and ethanol to run.

  • E85 Fuel And Your Old Car

    E85 Fuel And Your Old Car

    If you want to convert your American classic car to ethanol – E85, you must know that one of the rumors is that the ethanol will eat your rubber components.

  • Making Ethanol Out Of Corn

    Making Ethanol Out Of Corn

    Ethanol has become a very interesting topic in the last few years. This is why the topic deserves some clarifications as more and more people want to turn their corn into alternative fuel.

  • Pros and Cons

    Pros and Cons

    In the last decade a powerful movement against the use of fossil fuels has been developing. People are starting to look for alternative means of powering their motors and they start to turn to biofuels.

  • Are Ethanol And Biodiesel Compatible

    Are Ethanol And Biodiesel Compatible

    In order to understand the connection between ethanol and the biodiesel, you need to do some research about each of them and understand what they are and how they work.

  • Ethanol As Fuel

    Ethanol As Fuel

    Nowadays people are more and more concerned with finding alternative fuel sources for their motor vehicles. There are many alternatives on the table and sometimes it is very hard to pick one and stick with it.

  • Ethanol From Green Waste

    Ethanol From Green Waste

    This great technology of making ethanol fuel from green waste is one of the biggest discoveries of our time. Scientists have managed to find ways of producing ethanol from grass, leaves and other stuff like that, using the current technology.

  • Ethanol From Sugar Cane

    Ethanol From Sugar Cane

    When somebody speaks of Caribbean, many of us think about a nice and calm place for a vacation. But these islands are also a source of wealth and they have been for many years now.

  • How Ethanol Can Help Create A Cleaner World

    How Ethanol Can Help Create A Cleaner World

    When scientists began to work on ethanol research, they understood the impact their research was going to have on the car industry.

  • Ethanol in Gasoline

    Ethanol in Gasoline

    Right now our fuel is E10. This means that only 10% of the fuel is made of ethanol. The US government is regulating that, preventing any trouble that the use of ethanol might have.

  • Everything You Need To Know About Ethanol

    Everything You Need To Know About Ethanol

    Ethanol is a very common substance, an alcohol that has developed into an alternative fuel source. Ethanol can be produced from corn, wheat, barely, sugar cane and other cellulosic biomasses like grass and trees.

  • Flex Fuel Conversion Kits

    Flex Fuel Conversion Kits

    Each day, the energy consumption is getting higher and higher. For many years now we have been depending on gasoline to power the everyday lives. But this dependence is not good as fossil sources are diminishing year by year and their prices are getting bigger.

  • Flying Aircraft With Ethanol

    Flying Aircraft With Ethanol

    Ethanol is a very common substance that has been used in many industries for some time now. Nowadays, scientists are working on various methods to put this substance to better use.

  • Getting Tax Breaks With Ethanol Vehicles

    Getting Tax Breaks With Ethanol Vehicles

    The alternative fuel issue is a much debated topic and the government is doing what it can to promote it. On the federal tax return paper you filled in this year you might have seen that the government is giving tax credits to people that have alternative fuel vehicles.

  • Using Hemp To Make Ethanol

    Using Hemp To Make Ethanol

    The latest research shows that hemp is another source for producing ethanol. Also, it seems that hemp contains 4 times more cellulose than corn and this is great for producing ethanol.

  • Home Ethanol Production

    Home Ethanol Production

    Ethanol is a very common substance. So common it has become, that nowadays there are people doing it in their own home. The fuel shortage and the increase in prices have made US citizens to turn to producing alternative fuel in their own home.

  • The Promise of Cellulose Ethanol

    The Promise of Cellulose Ethanol

    The cellulose ethanol is the ethanol derived from organic matter like switch grass, wood chips, prairie grass, and sometimes saw dust.

  • Using Ethanol Blended Gasoline

    Using Ethanol Blended Gasoline

    In South Dakota and many other states, the gasoline is blended with 10% ethanol. Even if ethanol is more expensive to produce than gasoline, for the mix we pay 10 cents per gallon because the government is funding it.