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Has the Ethanol Threat Manifested In the US?

Five years ago today, we mentioned here what was characterized as "The Great Ethanol Scam." According to the central story in that post, the ethanol in gasoline was (or would be) "destroying engines in large numbers," and the only real winners with a rise in the use of ethanol as a gasoline supplement would be auto mechanics. An increasing number of cars are officially cleared for use with E15 (15 percent ethanol), and a growing number of E85 vehicles are in the wild now, too, though apparently many of their owners don't realize that their cars can burn a mixture that's mostly ethanol. When I can, I fill my car with no-ethanol gas, but that's not very easy to find (farmer's co-ops are one handy source), so most of my driving over the past decade has been with E10 fuel. I seem to get better mileage with all-gas, but the circumstances haven't been controlled enough to make a good comparison. What has your experience been? Have you experienced ethanol-related car problems, or were the predictions overblown?

36 of 432 comments (clear)

  1. Ethanol threat??!!! by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 5, Funny

    My God, someone's after the BOOZE?!

    Well, scam or not, we can't have that sort of behaviour. It was bad enough when we ran out of vermouth, without this sort of nonsense....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  2. ok if your car is new by indy_Muad'Dib · · Score: 5, Interesting

    2012 honda insight runs the e10 fine but gets better mileage using 0% ethanol gas from the local marina, ive had to rebuild the fuel system on my 65 datsun van because of the ethanol eating the hoses.

    1. Re:ok if your car is new by Austrian+Anarchy · · Score: 4, Informative

      2012 honda insight runs the e10 fine but gets better mileage using 0% ethanol gas from the local marina, ive had to rebuild the fuel system on my 65 datsun van because of the ethanol eating the hoses.

      That is why as I restore my 1972 Charger, she is getting ethanol compatible gaskets and lines. Going with a six-pack traditional carb setup too because MPFI additional expense on a small block is just not justified.

      From the post above:

      I seem to get better mileage with all-gas, but the circumstances haven't been controlled enough to make a good comparison.

      The energy density of gasoline is higher than with ethanol, so the more ethanol you add the more you "dilute" the energy contained in a particular volume. One thing the ethanol seems pretty good for is cleaning out your fuel system. If you are in an area where they seasonally increase the ethanol you might want to change that fuel filter a tank or two after the swap. Also, a fuel drying additive is a good idea if you have any ethanol, because that stuff collects water like mad. Keeping the water in solution reduces fuel tank corrosion.

      --
      Time Bomber the Book coming soon.
    2. Re:ok if your car is new by knightghost · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Ethanol cost me $2,000 in repairs to my motorcycle and a lot of hours of work on cleaning out carburetors from small engines.

      Corn ethanol is an expensive way to turn good oil into bad gasoline. It was pushed as corporate welfare for ag stages. Everyone involved has always known that it was a big lie.

    3. Re:ok if your car is new by sribe · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also, a fuel drying additive is a good idea if you have any ethanol, because that stuff collects water like mad.

      You do know what fuel-drying solutions are made of, right???

      Keeping the water in solution reduces fuel tank corrosion.

      Which is exactly what ethanol does...

    4. Re:ok if your car is new by gl4ss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sadly the stats don't agree with your anecdotal story.

      Canada has required a minimum of 5% ethanol in gas since 1999. Typically you'll see 15% ethanol. The percentage of original vehicles that have survived long term has gone up. Especially on the 12 years and up vehicles which the survival rate has gone up as much as 14%. http://www.fleetbusiness.com/p... see page 7.

      why are you answering like that? fleet cars are _new_, furthermore cars have gotten better in the last 20 years, much better longevity than the cars made in the 20 years prior to that. point was that old cars need expensive reworks to fuel systems, which costs hobbyists a lot of money.

      even that wasn't the real actual point: adding ethanol is corporate welfare(for farmers) which makes ABSOLUTELY NO FINANCIAL SENSE WHATSOEVER. it's stupid, could just as well pay the farmers for nothing and skip using the energy for making the corn and refining the corn into ethanol.

      making the ethanol is not free and it just serves as a tool to create demand for corn so that the corn farmers don't go hungry - that's why it's % and that's why the only nations to go pure % have done so out of necessity(embargos and shit).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:ok if your car is new by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 4, Informative

      The difference between propanol and ethanol is trivial in this context. Actually the shorter chain molecule is going to be a slightly better drying agent by mass.

      --
      "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    6. Re:ok if your car is new by JMJimmy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My post was a direct response to the motorcycle comment, not the overall issue. However, part of the reason that cars have gotten better in the past 20 years is because of government regulations requiring ethanol. The manufacturers adjusted their manufacturing to account for this reality.

      As to the financial sense, it does make sense in the long term view. In the short term you're absolutely correct that, on the surface at least, it doesn't make any sense. Let me ask you this though: What happens when the oil does run out and these regulations weren't put in place? Car companies wouldn't have vehicles capable of handling the fuel properly, the amount of corn/etc needed for manufacturing bio-fuels would not be there, even if the materials were there the processing capacity & expertise would not exist. There are a lot of elements in the supply chain that exist for traditional oil that did not exist for bio-fuels. Some could be converted but that takes time - especially at the level required to meet market demands. It was never about the environment, it was a hedge against another energy crisis and/or collapse of the oil economy.

    7. Re:ok if your car is new by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That you are too dumb to understand doesn't make it an error on the part of the speaker.

      "Drying" fuel can also mean removing precipitated water, sitting at the bottom of the fuel tank by pulling it into the fuel, and burning it off. But it can also pull water from the air into the fuel, which is an undesired effect.

  3. Compromise is implied by multipurpose by rmdingler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For example: the dual fuel engines that can burn gasoline or methane, where because of the design compromises for the two fuel convenience, neither fuel operates at optimal function.

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

    1. Re:Compromise is implied by multipurpose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      What are you talking about? It's been decades since you have had to redesign an engine for natural gas (and back then "redesign" meant replacing the valve seats). In fact, it's simple enough nowadays, the typical way to do it is to take a gasoline car, add the appropriate injectors to the manifold for natural gas, add a controller for said injectors (and possibly a spark controller as well), add tanks, then connect it all up. This permits the car to start on gasoline (much easier for those cold winter days) and once the engine is warmed up (a couple of minutes later) the controller switches to natural gas at some point when the engine is at ~2000 RPM. The driver doesn't even notice the change.

      There's no compromise other than the additional weight of the new system and fuel, but frankly, there's no way around that other than being able to get the manufacturers to integrate natural gas fuel patterns into their controllers, and the controllers are only perhaps 0.1% of the system's overall weight anyways.

      Go speak with a propane (yes, it is a little different, but still, not different enough to matter) or natural gas conversions place and verify that I'm correct.

  4. Get 10% less fuel economy with E10... by BUL2294 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I firmly believe that E10 is a total scam. Anecdotally, doing pure highway driving, I get 8-10% less fuel economy with E10 than E0 (pure gasoline), so what's the point? This has been consistently the case with the last 3 cars I've owned (V8 RWD, turbo I4 AWD, regular I4 FWD). Losing 10% fuel economy for the privilege (more accurately, the forced subsidy of corn growers in many states) of driving E10 makes no sense to me. Just water down my gasoline by 10%--same effect but water is cheaper than ethanol...

    --
    Windows 3.1x calc: 3.11 - 3.10 = 0.00
    1. Re:Get 10% less fuel economy with E10... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I firmly believe that E10 is a total scam. Anecdotally, doing pure highway driving, I get 8-10% less fuel economy with E10 than E0 (pure gasoline), so what's the point?

      Well, if you actually paid attention to the science, you'd realize that the point was to alter the tailpipe emissions from your engine, to the point where you driving your car, even if you use more gas in the end, will produce less pollution.

      Seriously, you could look this up in the law they passed. The math is right there. So is the research. Believe it or not, they did look at alternatives. But ethanol worked out.

      This has been consistently the case with the last 3 cars I've owned (V8 RWD, turbo I4 AWD, regular I4 FWD). Losing 10% fuel economy for the privilege (more accurately, the forced subsidy of corn growers in many states) of driving E10 makes no sense to me. Just water down my gasoline by 10%--same effect but water is cheaper than ethanol...

      Water wouldn't have the same effects that ethanol does. In fact, it'd reduce your mpg even more than ethanol, without having the beneficial effects.

      So no, no, thank you.

  5. A lose/lose/lose situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ethanol is a lose/lose/lose situation all the way around here in the US:

    1: The corn used to make ethanol causes higher fuel prices, either directly or indirectly because feed for livestock is up in price, so ethanol takes food out of people's mouths.

    2: E-15 voids car warranties, and ECMs can tell if E-15 is put in and throw a code that can't be cleared by a ScanGauge, but only by a dealer.

    3: Gasoline has a very shitty shelf life. I used to be able to store gasoline for a lawn mower for 1-2 years. Now, even with fuel preservative, even six months may be pushing it, and can clog up the carb or cause a bad reaction.

    4: As an RV-er, the #1 cause of generator malfunctions is bad gas. This was not an issue 1-2 decades ago, but when looking at a used motorhome, the first thing you have to do is rebuild/replace the carb unless the previous owner either ran the generator every so often, or fogged it, with OnaGard fogging spray.

    Then there is the E85 scam. It has significantly less MPG than regular gas... but the cost difference makes it not worth getting. The only advantage it gives is that with a Flex-Fuel engine that can adjust fuel/air ratios, it burns hotter so you get 5-10 more horsepower.

    If the US had plants like Brazil did that were by products of growing, I'd champion ethanol, but as it stands right now, people are starving due to E-10, so anyone who has a shred of ethics can't champion this.

  6. Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Corn ethanol is an EROI disaster. This is big-agra, some of the same people that ram HFCS into everything and spam tons of research trying to exonerate added sugar as the culprit in the obesity epidemic. Subsidize corn. We love it.

    "I seem to get better mileage with all-gas." You seem to have forgotten that the energy density of ethanol is lower to the point that aircraft will never under any circumstances use it. 42MJ/kg vs 30MJ/kg. Per liter it's even worse. You're not getting better gas mileage.

  7. Comment from a Chemist by NReitzel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing is, ethanol has a lower energy density per litre (or gallon, if you are metrically challanged) than does gasoline, just as gasoline has a lower energy density than diesel fuel.

    You get better mileage out of diesel than gasoline, and better mileage out of gasoline than ethanol, all things being equal. Laws of thermodynamics aren't to be bypassed. No amount of "clever" can change the basic fact that gasoline holds more energy than ethanol.

    However, and this may count for something for you, as it does for me, ethanol releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that was taken out of the atmosphere to grow the crop that led to the ethanol. There is no net increase of CO2, as there is with fossil fuels. Of course, a cynic might point out (and I might be one) that the carbon in the fossil fuel was also in the atmosphere at one time, to the tune of no less than 1500 ppm in the Carboniferous period.

    Using ethanol isn't for getting better mileage, it's for reducing carbon footprint, the amount of carbon added to the atmosphere when you go down to the corner store to buy a six-pack of beer. The beer, btw, doesn't add carbon to the atmosphere, because like the ethanol that's in it, that carbon came -out- of the atmosphere when the crops to make it were grown.

    --

    Don't take life too seriously; it isn't permanent.

    1. Re:Comment from a Chemist by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ethanol releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that was taken out of the atmosphere to grow the crop that led to the ethanol. There is no net increase of CO2, as there is with fossil fuels.

      So, how much fossil fuel is used to grow & harvest the corn? And then there's the whole "distill it" part. Not sure how much energy is used to distill corn liquor as opposed to gasoline....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:Comment from a Chemist by sharkytm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Here's where your net-carbon-zero falls apart: It takes energy to ferment and distill the ethanol. Where does that energy come from? Electricity, mainly produced by coal, natural gas, and oil. So, your tying a food commodity price to fuel, burning coal to do it, and causing the resulting fuel to be less efficient. Ethanol in fuel is a lose-lose. The only reason that it doesn't cause fuel prices to rise is that the government is paying farmers to grow the corn in the first place, artificially depressing the price.

    3. Re:Comment from a Chemist by Richy_T · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, simply incomplete.

      The question is whether it takes more fossil fuels to make the ethanol than are saved by using it.

      And the answer is "yes".

      For something like solar panels, you can argue that they break even after about 10 years and technology is improving. In the case of ethanol in fuel, it's a derp situation from the word "go".

    4. Re:Comment from a Chemist by Richy_T · · Score: 3, Informative

      The purpose is to curry favor with corn farmers and related people and industries in key states for politicians.

  8. Why do you hate plants? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    The poor plants, having to fight continuously for every ounce (or milliliter, if you are Imperally challenged) of carbon dioxide that they need in order to sustain their very existence. And you begrudge them the potential bountiful feast of our releasing the pent-up food supply that lies underground, cruelly kept from the innocent plant life for thousands, perhaps millions of years.

    You plant-haters are all alike, every one of you.

  9. A brazilian point of view by morcego · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Brazil is considered one of the world leader in ethanol, the country with the most successful alternative fuel program, one of the cheaper (if not cheapest) ethanol technologies and, by using sugar cane, one of the most energy efficient. All cars here can easily handle up to E40, and most cars can handle any mix of gas and ethanol. Oh, and the flex fuel technology for any kind of mix? Mostly developed here also.

    That all being said, I don't use pure ethanol. We are not able to find pure gas here, because of local laws (the government mandates the ethanol level), but I avoid it as much as I can. Even with everything we have in our favor here, it is still most expensive, and the overall car performance is not as good as with gas. For ethanol to be a cheaper option for the consumer, its price on the pump has to be no higher than 75% of gas.

    There is, however, another side of the coin. Gas is a limited resource. We need to develop alternative fuel technologies, and right now ethanol is the best, if not only, viable option. The technology is getting cheaper everyday, and improving a lot. As someone who saw the so called birth of the car ethanol, in the 1980's, I can see how much that changed.

    Last, but not least, gas with some ethanol in it does pollute less. I remember seeing some time ago some studies regarding E20(ish), and the number was impressive.

    All told, it is an important technology, it is not a scam or a threat, but it is still improving. Luckly, we still have the luxury to choose, so we can say no. That won't last, tho.

    --
    morcego
    1. Re:A brazilian point of view by morcego · · Score: 5, Informative

      is the US climate and land conducive to growing sugar cane?

      Mostly it is not, unless you somehow genetically engineer sugar cane for different climates (some groups are working on it). The reason our climate and land are so conductive to growing sugar cane gives Brazil an edge, and is perhaps the reason it is more successful than a few other countries that also have a huge alternative fuel program.

      Corn based ethanol has less energy potential and is much more expensive. However, it is the only viable option available for the US right now. There are several studies involving kelp, sugar beat and castor beans that might benefit the US. Castor beans has a lot of potential. But it is much easier to pass laws and incentives for corn related programs in the US, for obvious reasons.

      --
      morcego
    2. Re:A brazilian point of view by Solandri · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes, there are two issues here which unfortunately many people conflate. Ethanol as a fuel, and how ethanol is made.

      Ethanol as a fuel is just a different fuel. It has slightly different characteristics and requirements than gasoline. But these can mostly be designed around. Using ethanol fuel is a technical problem, one which can mostly if not entirely be engineered around.

      Brazil makes its ethanol from sugar cane, which is actually just about the best crop you can use for making ethanol. It grows fast and has high sugar content, which can easily be converted into ethanol. Unfortunately, sugar cane is rather picky about where it grows, and only a few tropical and semi-tropical environments support it.

      The U.S. makes most of its ethanol from corn. IIRC, corn is down around #12 for best crop to use to make ethanol, so low that many question if its even cost-effective (costs more to make than you can sell the ethanol for) or carbon-effective (production uses more energy than the ethanol contains). Why does the U.S. use such a poor crop for ethanol production? Because during the Great Depression, the U.S. suffered food shortages. In response, the U.S. began subsidizing food production to insure there's always an oversupply (this is why we pay farmers not to grow crops - so their fields are available for immediate use should a disaster like the Dust Bowl befall a signification fraction of our arable land). Most of those food subsides are for corn, which means we always have an oversupply of corn. Most of it gets used as feed for cattle. Some of it gets shipped overseas as foreign aid. And some clever chemists figured out a way to convert it into high fructose corn syrup as a substitute for sucrose.

      Then during the Arab Oil Embargo of the 1970s, someone got the bright idea of turning that excess corn into ethanol. It's a great idea because otherwise that corn would've rotted in grain silos, feeding rats and mice. You've already paid for its production so it's a sunk cost - the fact that corn isn't an ideal ethanol crop doesn't matter because by this point it's basically free. You're going to lose the money you spent growing the corn anyway, so might as well put it to good use. So in the context of things to do with excess corn, converting it to ethanol is a great idea.

      Unfortunately, the Corn lobby then got its hands on it. Now we're growing corn for the sole purpose of converting it into ethanol. The economics which make corn ethanol work for excess corn completely break down when you're growing corn just to convert it into ethanol. Now the cost to grow the corn is no longer a sunk cost; it's a real cost which needs to be added into the price of the ethanol. This is the scam. Ethanol as a fuel is fine. Corn ethanol is a scam. Eliminate the corn ethanol subsidies and the corn ethanol industry implodes because it's uneconomical and uncompetitive with other crops. I hear sugar beets mentioned frequently as a better ethanol crop which will grow readily in the U.S. (they actually produce more sugar than sugar cane, just grow slower).

  10. Ask Slashdot? by Fnord666 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Timothy,

    Once again you have posted an "Ask Slashdot" article in a different section than where it belongs. Some of us regulate what articles we see by section and would appreciate it if you would at least try to get it right.

    Thanks.

    Fnord666

    --
    'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
  11. For those who usually get "irony" wrong.. by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I fill my car with no-ethanol gas, but that's not very easy to find (farmer's co-ops are one handy source) </quote>

    Priceless.

  12. meh by Charliemopps · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It makes your seals ware out faster, but that's about it. Most people drive around with half their seals and gaskets shot, leaking oil and getting crap millage anyway. So it's not like they'd notice. People that have no clue how their car works have a bigger detrimental impact on the environment than any fault in the design of cars. I see Chevy volts all around me now, yet when I pull up to them at a red light I can hear the engine running. Meaning they've bought an electric car, aren't charging it and driving around on the generator probably burning more fuel than if they had just bought a gas car. You can't engineer the stupid out of people.

  13. My parents took our Canadian car to Florida by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My parents took our Canadian car to Florida, which generally is not designed for E85. The mechanic showed me that it basically turned nearly every rubber bit into mush. There were many hoses where you could push your finger through the hose with not much effort. Luckily most of those hoses were available off a wrecker so for very little they just replaced every single hose. Where the mechanic was worried was what things like the fuel pumps or whatnot might look like.

    I have a distinct feeling that my parents car would not be the only Canadian car to spend time in the US.

    1. Re:My parents took our Canadian car to Florida by Jmc23 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That probably has less to do with it being a 'canadian' car (hint, they're all pretty much manufactured out of the same places) than it does with the age of the car.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  14. Oblig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    YMMV

  15. Re:I dont know about cars... by Austrian+Anarchy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    but with motorcycles, ethanol has continually given Carbs troubles by promoting gas that gets all sorts of bacteria growing in it within a week due to the ethanol being a great thriving place for it.

    I hate ethanol and it ruins motorcycles really quickly :(

    Have you tried a fuel drying agent? The bacteria is growing because the ethanol absorbs water and gives it a medium to grow. Straight petrol products do that too, at a lesser extent.

    --
    Time Bomber the Book coming soon.
  16. The short version by slashmydots · · Score: 3

    My parents' new car can take E85. It can be filled up a lot cheaper on that fuel but it gets exactly that reduction in gas mileage making it break even. So it's a wash except the lower chemical energy lowers the horsepower. So they don't fill it up with E85. It's a stupid idea and it's wasting corn and upping food prices. We need electric cars that are sourced by fusion power plants.

  17. NOT ok if your car is new by frovingslosh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have a "new" 2013 Mazda 3. Ethanol is said to have 3% less energy than gas, but I've observed that when I use "may contain up to 10% ethanol" gas that I get a 10% or more drop in mileage($) contrasted to when I drive the extra mileage and pay more for "pure gas". So what that tells me is that I (and the planet) would be better off if the alcohol wasn't in the gas at all and they just sold me 9/10 of a gallon of gas for what they are charging me for gas adulterated with ethanol. I wouldn't have to haul the extra useless alcohol around, I would have more space in my tank for gas, and if we didn't waste food and energy to make and transport ethanol, the world would have more food and just maybe corn prices wouldn't be so high.

    In theory 9/10 of a gallon of gas without alcohol added should cost even less than a gallon of the mixed crap, since you would save all the costs of the alcohol. But in reality pure gas is hard to find and end up commanding a premium price.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  18. Its still a boondoggle by sdinfoserv · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm from a corn state and have posted on this topic before (see link).
    It's amazing driving through the country side and view the castles that have erupted on the plains. These palatial residences funded by federal corn / ethanol subsidies - aka - our tax dollars. Often paired with massive motorhomes providing winter escape in a level of opulence previously unknown to agrarian workers.
    From a pure energy perspective, ethanol has only 2/3 the BTU of gasoline.
    76,000 = BTU of energy in a gallon of ethanol
    116,090 = BTU of energy in a gallon of gasoline
    Even vehicles rated to run ethanol should expect a 20%-30% decrease in fuel economy. I personally have experienced this. I drove with a coworker in a 2012 chevy truck rated for e85. We drove a 200 mile road trip (1 way) on trip there we used ethanol, on the trip back we used gasoline. True to form the return trip experienced more that 1/3 increase in fuel economy.
    throw in the fact that ethanol must be distributed via semi-trucks and can't be piped (its too corrosive), it is usually distilled with propane, (an inefficient fuel in itself) and the reality is ethanol consumes more energy than it contains. Ethanol is a negative energy source. A Purdue university study came to that conclusion. Of course multitudes of ethanol funded studies have attempted to debunk that fact...
    http://slashdot.org/comments.p...
    to answer your question, yes, ethanol is a boondoggle. unfortunately lobbyists have taken away our choice and in many states we no longer can choose pure gasoline.

  19. Re:Price per kilojoule [Re:ok if your car is new] by Austrian+Anarchy · · Score: 3, Funny

    Organic gas is the planet safe alternative.

    --
    Time Bomber the Book coming soon.
  20. Re:ethanol and rubber by sillybilly · · Score: 4, Informative

    Like dissolves like. Polar materials dissolve in polar solvents, such as salt in water, nonpolar materials in nonpolar solvents, such as oil in gasoline. There is this term matched "cohesive energy density," and some materials, like PVC, have very few solvents, with correct parameters, like tetrahydrofuran, that dissolve it extremely well, and almost nothing else works.

    Your rubber must be of a more polar nature, that is made to resist nonpolar gasoline, such as nitrile rubber, but that also means it's less resistant to polar solvents, like ethanol. Most rubbers are nonpolar, like the stuff on your tires, (unvulcanized) styrene butadiene, or epdm, or butyl rubber, they completely disintegrate in gasoline, but they would resist ethanol pretty well. There are of course rubbers that resist almost everything, such as teflon-type fluorinated rubbers, but now you're talking something like $15-20/lb of material compared to say $3/lb for nitrile rubber. I don't know what the actual pricing is these days, I used to know a decade and a half ago when gas prices were still near $1/gal, and correspondingly plastic and rubbers were cheaper. For conduits actually polypropylene/polyethylene should be ultra cheap and resist both gasoline and ethanol, as these crystalline plastics have no solvents whatsoever at room temperature, but they are not rubbery, not resilient, so we're really talking the seals and O-rings here, that should be small and possible to make from very high cost materials, like fluorinated rubbers.