John Smith wrote: > On 9 February 2010 10:56, John Henderson <[email protected]> wrote: >> I take "ethanol" as meaning e100 (like what's available in Brazil). > > It doesn't explicitly state one way or the other on the wiki: > > http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Fuel > > Also it's against the laws of physics to get e100, you need additivies > to stop water in humidity bonding with pure ethanol, and to stop > people from trying to drink it instead of putting it in their cars, > from memory the best you can do is e95...
As a term for automotive fuel, e100 means that there's no petroleum/gasoline whatsoever in the mix: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_ethanol_fuel_mixtures Similarly, I take "biodiesel" to mean b100, as is sold at at least one servo in Sydney. b5 and b20 are more commonly-available grades of Diesel. > Yes, but I'd still add the right tags to OSM otherwise only that site > has the information. Except that it's understood that Australian servos will sell 91 octane ULP, whereas that fuel is excluded by default on www.osmfuel.org - only the European grades (95 and 98 octane) come up unless 91 is explicitly added. John H _______________________________________________ Talk-au mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-au

