High Ethanol Fuel Endurance: A Study of the Effects of Running Gasoline with 15% Ethanol Concentration in Current Production Outboard Four-Stroke Engines and Conventional Two-Stroke Outboard Marine Engines

David Hilbert

Research output: NRELSubcontract Report

Abstract

Three Mercury Marine outboard marine engines were evaluated for durability using E15 fuel -- gasoline blended with 15% ethanol. Direct comparison was made to operation on E0 (ethanol-free gasoline) to determine the effects of increased ethanol on engine durability. Testing was conducted using a 300-hour wide-open throttle (WOT) test protocol, a typical durability cycle used by the outboard marineindustry. Use of E15 resulted in reduced CO emissions, as expected for open-loop, non-feedback control engines. HC emissions effects were variable. Exhaust gas and engine operating temperatures increased as a consequence of leaner operation. Each E15 test engine exhibited some deterioration that may have been related to the test fuel. The 9.9 HP, four-stroke E15 engine exhibited variablehydrocarbon emissions at 300 hours -- an indication of lean misfire. The 300HP, four-stroke, supercharged Verado engine and the 200HP, two-stroke legacy engine tested with E15 fuel failed to complete the durability test. The Verado engine failed three exhaust valves at 285 endurance hours while the 200HP legacy engine failed a main crank bearing at 256 endurance hours. All E0-dedicated enginescompleted the durability cycle without incident. Additional testing is necessary to link the observed engine failures to ethanol in the test fuel.
Original languageAmerican English
PublisherNational Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)
Number of pages55
StatePublished - 2011

Bibliographical note

Work performed by Mercury Marine, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/SR-5400-52909

Keywords

  • emissions testing
  • engine durability
  • ethanol
  • Mercury Marine

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