E10 gasoline is corrosive, hygroscopic, and aggressive on the rubber, fiberglass, and brass that classic fuel systems were never designed to handle. Here is what it does and how to store around it.
Modern pump gasoline is E10 — 10% ethanol blended into 90% gasoline by EPA mandate since 2007. Ethanol is hygroscopic (it pulls water out of the air), it is a solvent (it dissolves varnish and old fuel residue inside the tank), and it is incompatible with much of the rubber, brass, fiberglass, and zinc-plated steel that classic American and European fuel systems were built around. Park a 1969 Mustang, a 1972 911, or a 1965 Corvette on E10 for a year in a Las Vegas garage and you can expect a fuel system rebuild that runs $3,000 to $15,000. Park the same car on stabilized non-ethanol or race fuel inside a climate-controlled facility and the fuel system survives indefinitely. The difference is fuel chemistry and storage temperature — nothing else. At REVCity Auto Storage — 7185 Bermuda Rd, Las Vegas NV 89119, 725-272-1803 — every classic vehicle in long-term storage runs the protocol below.
Ethanol behaves like a solvent and a desiccant simultaneously. Three distinct chemistry problems unfold inside a fuel tank that sits on E10:
Hagerty Insurance — the leading collector car insurer in North America — has published guidance for stored classics. Their position is unambiguous and aligns with what every reputable classic engine builder says.
The Hagerty position lines up with what professional restorers do. The cheapest fuel system rebuild on a 1960s muscle car runs $3,000 (carburetor rebuild plus fuel lines). A complete fuel system rebuild on a 1965 Corvette with fiberglass tank, fuel cell conversion, and Weber carbs runs $12,000 to $15,000. A new Ferrari 308 fuel tank alone is $4,800. The ethanol prevention protocol costs $40 in stabilizer and 20 miles of driving on non-ethanol fuel. The math is not close.
Las Vegas has a limited number of stations that sell ethanol-free 90+ octane gasoline. The locations change. As of 2026, these are the operative options for collector owners storing through REVCity.
| Fuel Type | Octane | Use Case | Approximate Cost / Gal (2026) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol-free pump gas (pure-gas.org listed) | 87–91 | Best for storage if available locally; verify station before buying | $5.50–$6.50 |
| VP Racing C12 (race fuel) | 108 | Leaded race fuel; ideal for stored race cars and hot rods | $15–$18 |
| Sunoco Standard | 110 leaded | Race fuel; collector storage | $14–$17 |
| Avgas 100LL | 100 leaded | Aviation fuel; legally sold for off-road and storage use only | $7–$9 |
| E10 (regular pump gas) + PRI-G | 87–93 | Last-resort storage if ethanol-free unavailable; ~9 month max | $4.10–$5.50 |
| E10 + Sta-Bil 360 Marine | 87–93 | Last-resort; designed for hygroscopic moisture environments | $4.10–$5.50 |
Not every fuel stabilizer is effective against ethanol. Most consumer-grade stabilizers are antioxidants — they slow gasoline oxidation but do nothing about ethanol-water phase separation. The two products that classic engine builders consistently recommend are:
Run all of the following steps before the car enters long-term storage. The protocol below is what REVCity executes on every classic that enters our facility.
Fuel system materials compatibility with ethanol is a function of model year and OEM specification, not vintage alone. Many 1970s and 1980s European and American cars were built with materials that are not E10-tolerant.
| Era / Vehicle | Original Fuel Line Material | Ethanol Compatibility | Action for E10 Storage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-1980 American (Mustang, Camaro, Corvette, Chevelle) | Natural rubber + NBR | Poor — swells, cracks | Replace fuel line with FKM/Viton; consider tank coating |
| 1953–1972 Corvette (fiberglass tank) | NBR + fiberglass tank | Tank leaches resin | Replace tank with aluminum fuel cell, or run race fuel only |
| 1970s European (911, 911 Turbo, Pantera, Ferrari) | NBR + brass/pot-metal carb | Poor — corrosion at carb jets | Replace fuel line; verify carb compatibility; storage stabilizer |
| 1980s OE Bosch K-Jet / KE-Jet (911, Mercedes) | NBR + steel injectors | Marginal — injector seals fail | Replace seals; FKM line upgrade; minimize E10 sits |
| Post-1988 American | FKM/Viton + modern injection | Designed for E10 | Standard storage protocol acceptable |
| Modern collector (2010+) | FKM + ethanol-compatible composites | Excellent | E10 storage with stabilizer is fine |
Fuel system chemistry is temperature-dependent. The Arrhenius rate principle applies: chemical reactions roughly double in speed for every 10°C (18°F) increase in temperature. A classic stored at 115°F peak summer in a Las Vegas garage runs every fuel system degradation reaction 3–4 times faster than the same car stored at 65°F.
Combined, the climate envelope at REVCity extends usable stored-fuel shelf life from the 90-day E10 typical to 9–12 months — long enough that owners can stabilize once and not think about fuel again for almost a full year. Climate control versus temperature control covers the underlying engineering.
Climate-controlled 50–70°F (4x slower fuel degradation than garage storage). 40–50% RH (eliminates phase separation risk). BendPak 4-post lifts at every space. Documented intake for Hagerty agreed-value claims. Call 725-272-1803 to reserve classic vehicle storage.