bruce wrote:E85 is not magic. Especially in an NA car. You've obviously done something not quite right.
True all E85 means is it is 'up to 85% ethanol' It does not tell you the octane rating, which is the thing that matters.
98 is 98 octane.
Regular pump E85 is 105 octane.
'Race' pump E85 is 107 octane.
The V8 supercar E85 is more (secret).
If you could get hold of 107 octane non-ethanol fuel it would give the same result as 107 octane E85 but use much less fuel.
EFI engines will self compensate (as long as the injectors have sufficient max flow rate) but engines with carby's will run very lean and will need re-jetting.
Any engine going from 98 to 107 octane with no changes will actually produce very slightly less power.
A NA engine going from 98 to 107 octane with the appropriate fuel and ignition settings and increased compression might get up to 10% improvement.
A turbocharged or supercharged engine going from 98 to 107 octane with the appropriate fuel and ignition settings and increased boost might get up to 30% improvement. This based on the engine being initially well tuned for the 98 octane fuel.