Mono,
How do you test to see if the gas is ethanol free ?
Put some water in a small glass jar, about 15% of its total volume. Precisely mark the level of the water on the outside of the jar. Fill the rest of the jar with gasoline, put the lid on, shake it to mix the water and gasoline, and put it down to rest. After a while the gasoline and water will be separated again. If there was any ethanol in the gasoline, most of it will have migrated to the water - so if the water level remained exactly the same, the gasoline is ethanol-free...
Here is a semi-related question for the group . . . at the cycle shop they sell an additive that is supposed to counter act the effects of Ethonol.
Do any of those products work ?
Ethanol has more than one side effect, and I can only imagine one of those (corrosion) to be countered by a small amount of some chemical compound... They cannot change the fact that ethanol contains an oxygen atom in every molecule while gasoline does not, for example, or that ethanol is a solvent which will penetrate some plastics and rubber...
I'm pretty sure that it won't prevent a carburetted engine from running lean, or plug chops from being way off, or prevent seals from swelling, or prevent composite fuel tanks from slowly solving, etc...
As long as they won't explain exactly what's in this stuff and why it should work, I consider this stuff to be a regular case of snake oil
Gas pumps will have a sticker saying if they contain ethanol. Here they say up to 10% ethanol added.
Over here they don't...
(And since this industry is about making money, ethanol is heavily subsidized, and petrol companies don't have a track record for reliability, I wouldn't trust a sticker anyway...)