Official E85 (Ethanol) thread
There a few threads in the archives, but no real good information, and really nothing on the 07's. I know there are a lot of politics and confusion behind E85, mostly around corn based ethanol, and I rather keep those topics out of this thread, as there are plenty of places to debate that.
My experience:
Since I bought my car, I have kept a spreadsheet and chart of my gas mileage, to give as accurate a comparison as possible when comparing mileage and cost of each fuel. So I started running E85 in my 07 about a week and a half ago. My first 7 fill ups were premium unleaded. 1st thing I noticed when driving away from the station was alcohol type smell and that the car's engine braking was drastically increased. Though, after a few miles the smell went away and the engine braking was normal. I assumed the engine braking was the cars engine management system adjusting the the E85. Performance is NOTABLY improved. The car has more power, crisper throttle response, and the touch smoother idle. Of course mileage is down 26%. Which is expected since E85 has 30% less BTU's of energy compared to Premium. Though, E85 in my area is ~25% lower priced then premium, so in essence, it is a wash as far as price per mile. I only have 2 E85 stations in my area, so E85 in my area is much higher priced then some other areas with more competition.
So, I will continue to update this thread and would appreciate anyone else with experience with E85 to do the same.
Here are the links to my gas mileage logs and charts:
http://www.e85benz.com/images/chart.jpg
http://www.e85benz.com/images/mileage.jpg
http://e85benz.com/images/C230.xls
Last edited by johnand; May 14, 2007 at 09:02 PM. Reason: Spelling
2007 2.5L C230 Sedan automatic AND manual transmission
2005 2.6L C240 luxury series
2003-2005 3.2L Mercedes-Benz C320's
Last edited by johnand; May 14, 2007 at 09:30 PM. Reason: Inaccurate models
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I will give it a shot next winter and report back, but I suspect the heating will be an issue. Though, they only run 70% Ethanol at the E85 pumps here in the winter.
Since I live in Washington, but work and fill up with E85 in Oregon, I do have one other plus, and that is not having to pump it
The only disadvantage I currently have is the shorter driving distance means more fillups, which is a little inconvenient.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
I had a MY03 C320 luxury and it qualified. Sport was not offered at the time I purchased mine.



I noticed that John is recording the temperature when he purchased the fuel. This reminds me of one of the greatest cons now going on in the retail gas business. For gasoline, every 15 degrees the fuel temperature goes up, you get 1% less product than shown on the pump. The government has set 60 F as the standard (Hawaii is an exception). I doubt a single gallon is pumped in California at 60 F. The ambient temperature makes no difference, as the fuel is near the "rack temperature" when you buy it. The "rack" is the plumbing system that fills the transport truck. The fuel usually flows through exposed pipes to the rack, and averages 85 F. The underground storage tanks at all stations are now insulated and double walled. This acts like a thermos to keep the fuel at the same temp as when delivered. This means consumers are getting shorted about 2% at the pump. When the air temp is higher we get less, as much as 3% over the summer months. There are temperature compensation devices certified for use on gas pumps, but station owners and the state are not interested in using them. *The state makes more tax money if you are paying for more gallons. It is interesting to note that oil companies do have temperature compensation devices on their pumps that are used to sell fuel to each other, i.e. Shell to Chevron, and on the meter for the rack so station owners get fair measure.
Thats most likely due to the fact that they are in your cache. Here is what I get when clicking on your links.
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /images/chart.jpg on this server.
Additionally, a 404 Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apache/1.3.37 Server at www.e85benz.com Port 80
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /images/chart.jpg on this server.
Additionally, a 404 Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apache/1.3.37 Server at www.e85benz.com Port 80

There a few threads in the archives, but no real good information, and really nothing on the 07's. I know there are a lot of politics and confusion behind E85, mostly around corn based ethanol, and I rather keep those topics out of this thread, as there are plenty of places to debate that.
My experience:
Since I bought my car, I have kept a spreadsheet and chart of my gas mileage, to give as accurate a comparison as possible when comparing mileage and cost of each fuel. So I started running E85 in my 07 about a week and a half ago. My first 7 fill ups were premium unleaded. 1st thing I noticed when driving away from the station was alcohol type smell and that the car's engine braking was drastically increased. Though, after a few miles the smell went away and the engine braking was normal. I assumed the engine braking was the cars engine management system adjusting the the E85. Performance is NOTABLY improved. The car has more power, crisper throttle response, and the touch smoother idle. Of course mileage is down 26%. Which is expected since E85 has 30% less BTU's of energy compared to Premium. Though, E85 in my area is ~25% lower priced then premium, so in essence, it is a wash as far as price per mile. I only have 2 E85 stations in my area, so E85 in my area is much higher priced then some other areas with more competition.
So, I will continue to update this thread and would appreciate anyone else with experience with E85 to do the same.
Here are the links to my gas mileage logs and charts:
http://www.e85benz.com/images/chart.jpg
http://www.e85benz.com/images/mileage.jpg
In any case, yes, this is the type of car talk that interests me.
E




If nothing else, alchohol reduces emmissions.
I used to add 20% when I was going for my smog on my older cars, and I'd pass with no problem. Ha, we're all coming up due for smog pretty soon.
Anyone get one yet?




