Terry - Somerset
Established Member
A little like taking lead out of petrol.
Additives can slow down the degradation. In the case of lead the solution was to re-machine valve seats. For E10 I suspect there will be a market for E10 compliant kits to fix most older cars and lawnmowers/chainsaws.
Manufacturers have known about this for nearly 2 decades and modified their products accordingly. It's progress - or so we are told. It is somewhat questionable whether land, equipment, herbicides and pesticides used for crop production would be better used for food rather than ethanol.
In 10 years EV will dominate new car sales so does it really matter anyway?
Additives can slow down the degradation. In the case of lead the solution was to re-machine valve seats. For E10 I suspect there will be a market for E10 compliant kits to fix most older cars and lawnmowers/chainsaws.
Manufacturers have known about this for nearly 2 decades and modified their products accordingly. It's progress - or so we are told. It is somewhat questionable whether land, equipment, herbicides and pesticides used for crop production would be better used for food rather than ethanol.
In 10 years EV will dominate new car sales so does it really matter anyway?