If you have the Flex Fuel Vehicle ( FFV )
Regular UNLEADED gasoline, up to 10% ethanol. Does not require high test, not made for E85 fuel.
Gas mileage is way better with regular unleaded gasoline over E85.
Regular gasoline can be used in an E85 vehicle, but E85 cannot be used in a vehicle that wasn't designed for it. Why? Bascially moving E85 creates a static charge, so the gas system needs to be mostly plastic to reduce the risk of sparking (plastic fittings, tubes, etc).
Unleaded regular pump gas will work just fine. Modern small engines are designed to run on low-octane, unleaded fuel. Stay away from E85, or any fuel with over 10% ethanol added.
Yes. An E85 car is called a Flex Fuel car meaning it can burn regular gasoline or E85.
The 3.0 L flexible fuel version will run on regular unleaded gas - 87 octane , or E85 ethanol , or any combination of the 2 fuels
( IF YOU HAVE THE 3.0 L FFV ENGINE ) ! - you can use E85 ethanol / regular unleaded 87 octane / or any combination of the 2 fuels i have a 99 ford ranger 3.0 five speed manual ffv engine and it will not run e85 at all it runs it to lean.
According to the 1998 Ford Expedition Owners Guide you use regular unleaded gas with an octane rating of ( 87 ) and up to ( 10 % ) ethanol so it does not have flex fuel engines ( As far as I know if you could use E85 the mileage would be worse )
E85
The Ford Ranger , 3.0 liter Flex Fuel Vehicle engine is designed to use " regular " unleaded gasoline , 87 octane , or E85 ethanol , or any combination of the 2 fuels
No , it is not a flexible fuel vehicle , use " regular " unleaded , 87 octane according to the Owner Guide
It's designed to run on " regular " unleaded gas - 87 octane . The gasoline can have a maximum of 10 % ethanol ( If you mean E 85 - NO ! )