Mileage is the only drawback to alternative fuels that will burn in a standard auto engine, be it LPG, CNG, or Ethanol (meaning primarily E85). It takes more to equal the amount of power available in a gallon of gasoline. E85 is the easiest to use, especially since you can go out and buy a car equipped to run it (flex-fuel) and it doesn't matter what the exact blend of E85 to straight gasoline is (the computer adjusts for it in a flex-fuel vehicle). But even when E85 is $2.65 and gasoline $3.00 per gallon, it costs more to go the same number of miles with E-85. There's a 20-25% loss in mileage. Now you could overcome this and build an engine to run specifically with one of the alternative fuels. Costs wouldn't be much more than a standard rebuild, and the vehicle should be cheaper to operate in the long run than on gasoline. All of those fuels will tolerate substantially higher compression ratios than gasoline engines -- that's the main alteration necessary, a higher compression ratio. The downside is you'd lose the ability to run straight gasoline. Building a specific vehicle would be okay for a commuter car provided the chosen fuel is readily available in the area, but would limit long distance travel. Of course you could always build a trailer with a large tank on it! I can see Tom driving along with a 200 gallon LPG tank in tow now... A direct fuel line would probably be illegal, but you could always stop to transfer fuel. ------------------- Date: Thu, 08 Nov 2007 23:25:09 -0800 From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> > > CT228-6-641 -- 19 gallons usable = US$371.78 > > > > CT305-7-641 -- 29 gallons usable = US$461.52 > Wow -- those are good prices! I paid $600 for a 34 gal. (28 usable) tank from Manchester Tank. Big fat cylindrical truck type "drop tank". Believe me, you want the biggest huge-ass tank you can possibly fit in the car. If your car gets 16mpg gasoline, perfectly well-tuned it will get about 13.6mpg on propane. Since there isn't exactly a propane filling station on every corner you want the hugest range you can possibly get. The "usable" business is the gas space required for liquid expansion with temperature. 20%. -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list