Anyone test out OV's Flex Fuel kit?
#1
Anyone test out OV's Flex Fuel kit?
https://www.ovtuned.com/collections/...-tuner-package
I imagine this is for E85 but I'm not entirely sure if this is everything needed to run E85. Someone far more experienced than me should comment on this. That being said, has anyone used this before? Is there any benefit to it?
I imagine this is for E85 but I'm not entirely sure if this is everything needed to run E85. Someone far more experienced than me should comment on this. That being said, has anyone used this before? Is there any benefit to it?
#2
E85 burns cooler than gasoline so the intake temperatures are lower is what I read. I guess that kit removes the rubber fuel lines which apparently e85 will damage. I had no idea e85 was more beneficial for HP. Just assumed it was to help make gas chepaer. Pretty cool stuff.
#3
E85 burns cooler than gasoline so the intake temperatures are lower is what I read. I guess that kit removes the rubber fuel lines which apparently e85 will damage. I had no idea e85 was more beneficial for HP. Just assumed it was to help make gas chepaer. Pretty cool stuff.
As to how much E85 adds in terms of power and a tune, there is no specific answer. I might email them about it but they tend to not respond that quickly, so it could take a while.
#5
From a previous Facebook chat OV said:
"with E85 you can expect a big jump in torque. top end horsepower depends on modifications"
They also said you get more gain from E85 if you have headers.
"with E85 you can expect a big jump in torque. top end horsepower depends on modifications"
They also said you get more gain from E85 if you have headers.
#6
This makes sense but is also really vague. They need to give us some numbers compared to stock, 91 octane tuned with no exhaust mods, E85 with no exhaust mods, 91 with full bolt ons, etc. Saying it just adds a lot of power isn't really reassuring. (Side note: saying 'big jump' in torque on an NA engine with no forced induction modification is a little too suspicious) Obviously if there are (reasonable) exhaust modifications, there will be more power. And this is what raises my doubt on this E85 kit. No numbers or anything. Who knows, it might add a ton of power but they haven't shown us any proof.
#7
Driver School Candidate
I’d be interested in this kit immensely for a multitude of reasons but would like to see their research first. When I had the 335 with it’s mods and ran a 50/50 E85 it was an entirely new engine. That car was amazing. FBO with tune we had guys getting 450 whp on 50/50. My reservations though point towards the fuel lines and other parts that might degrade when in contact with the high levels of ethanol since our systems aren’t made to endure that necessarily. In my experience, but with a different car, I stayed under 50/50 and didn’t have to replace fuel injectors, fuel pumps and I retained my stock lines.
Sadly since we’re running a NA-V engine e85 won’t get us that great of gains but it will help with smoother running, lower temps and a cleaner burn albeit sacrificing MPG.
Sadly since we’re running a NA-V engine e85 won’t get us that great of gains but it will help with smoother running, lower temps and a cleaner burn albeit sacrificing MPG.
Trending Topics
#8
Driver School Candidate
E85:
1. better latent heat than gas
2. lower energy content per liter
3. can be run much richer without power penalty
What I don't understand: if running E85 without any hardware changes, this presumes that the pump and fuel line have enough reserve capacity for more volume, and the injectors can be run at a higher duty cycle.
Is this true?
1. better latent heat than gas
2. lower energy content per liter
3. can be run much richer without power penalty
What I don't understand: if running E85 without any hardware changes, this presumes that the pump and fuel line have enough reserve capacity for more volume, and the injectors can be run at a higher duty cycle.
Is this true?
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post