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| Ford Explorer, model 2002, Automatic transmission, Petrol engine, only 56K KM, 4X4 Full Options! It has everything what you can expect of. Brand new Radio with CD player, 5 Doors, Alloy wheels, Air bags, Cold Aur condition system, Power doors, remote door opener and shutter, top carrier, towing coupler, running boards, board computer. Drive it in th ecity or on rugged roads. This car has Flexfuel (FFV).
Flex-fuel vehicles (ffv's) are designed to run on regular unleaded gasoline and an alcohol gasoline blended fuel, either ethanol or methanol, in any mixture. For example, FFV's cna run on E85 (85% ethanol, 15% gasoline), or M85 (85% methanol, 15% gasoline), 100% gasoline, or any combination of these fuels. Like other cars, a flexible fueled vehicle (FFV) has a fuel tank, fuel system, and a combustion engine but the connections between them are specialized. The vehicle is designed to run on either unleaded gasoline, or an alcohol based fuel (usually ethanol) in any mixture. The engine and fuel system in a flex-fuel vehicle must be adapted slightly to run on alcohol fuels because they are corrosive. FFV's also have a special sensor in the fuel line to analyze the fuel mixture and control the fuel injection and timing to adjust for different fuel ratios. The flex-fuel vehicle offers its owner an environmentally beneficial option whenever the alternative fuel is available. While most all cars are capable of running on E10 and or E15, that ability does not qualify them as being a Flexible Fuel Vehicle. E10 and E15 fuel blends are simply a replacement for the older, and possibly more widely known gasoline additive MTBE which was recently outlawed. Some Alternative Fuel Cars that were purchased, or put into service in 2006 qualify for a Tax Credit. |
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