It's not about belief. As I mentioned, I did try it. I should clarify though: Yes, there is more energy stored in gasoline but the Ethanol only represents 10% of the total you are pumping. As pure ethanol has about 66% of the energy content as gasoline per gallon, that means 1 gallon of E10 (90% gasoline / 10% Ethanol) has about 96.6% of the energy as a gallon of 100% gasoline. So you are getting about 3.4% less energy per gallon of E10 than pure gasoline.
While this definitely represents a loss of energy, I found that in real world driving (city, highway, parking, standing, etc) this 3.4% essentially becomes margin of error. Sorry dude.
(I don't mean to come across too a******-ish...)
I'm not sure why you're saying "sorry dude". This is a real world fact. You not having the same results is more of an anomaly, not proof against the data. So, "sorry dude" actually goes to you.
Many, many people confirm the above rough change of about 10% increase in fuel economy driving most vehicles. This may be more apparent in direct 92 vs 92 octane, and starting with truly empty tank, I have no idea.
Stating what you think are % of energy and resulting % in a gallon equaling 3.4% is really not exactly the same as an engineer finding an engine to be more efficient with a given fuel. I don't think it's a linear equation simply using % difference in the fuel. For all I know the effect is greater at certain altitudes or in certain engines. But across 4 engines, I've found roughly the same results.
BMW inline 6 twin turbo
Audi 4.2 V8
Land Rover, Buick sourced engine I think, in 2004 Discovery with Bosch management
Jaguar v8 in my LR3
The most obvious gains have been in the turbo bmw engine. Possibly the forced induction makes even better use of the fuel. The best comparisons I found in the LR3 is on a 100 mile out and back that for a few years I was driving a few times a week, same lane, same pavement, same hills, same speeds, etc. It was +1.5-1.8 ish mpg. Which pushed it into the 20-21 mpg range.
Your sig shows driving an lx and/or tundra. Which one did you try it in? Does your LX also say "premium only" in the fuel door or in manual? I still don't understand why the LX specs premium and LC says regular is fine. Is reg fine in LX too or would LC get better performance out of premium, while "fine" with regular 87 ?