- The Ethanol-powered Apache RTR 200 Fi E100 costs about Rs 8,600 more than the carburetted Apache RTR 200 4V ABS.
- It makes 21PS at 8500rpm and 18.1Nm, the same as its petrol-powered Fi variant.
- Ethanol is priced at less than 62 percent the price of petrol, making the Apache RTR 200 Fi E100 significantly cheaper to run.
TVS has launched an ethanol-powered variant of its Apache RTR 200 at Rs 1.2 lakh. This makes it Rs 8,600 more expensive than the petrol-powered Apache RTR 200 4V ABS that costs Rs 1.11 lakh (both ex-showroom Delhi). According to TVS, this new Apache RTR 200 Fi E100 will run on E100, which is 100 percent ethanol and makes the same power and torque than its petrol-powered Fi counterparts. In addition to being an environment-friendly source of fuel, ethanol is priced significantly lower than petrol, which should make the RTR 200 4V E100 quite affordable to run.
Also read: TVS Apache RTR 200 Race Edition 2.0: Road Test Review
The ethanol-powered Apache RTR 200 Fi E100 has cosmetic differences only in the form of a white paintjob with green graphics and ‘Ethanol’ written on the fuel tank. Other than that it carries the same underpinnings as the petrol-powered Apache RTR 200. However, it gets a single-channel ABS unit instead of the dual-channel ABS setup on the petrol variant.
Also read: TVS Apache RTR 160 4V Carb 3000km Long Term Review
TVS has modified the Apache RTR 200’s fuel-injected powerplant to run on 100 percent ethanol. For this, they have changed certain elastomer and rubber parts and used a twin spray, twin port electronic fuel injection setup. This ethanol-fueled motor makes 21PS at 8500rpm and 18.1Nm at 7000rpm. Claimed top speed is 129kmph. More significantly, the motor emits 50 percent less benzene and butadiene as well as significantly reduced NOX and CO. If needed, this motor can run on a blend of 80 percent ethanol and 20 percent petrol too.
While TVS have the ethanol-powered Apache RTR 200 Fi E100 ready, Amitabh Kant, CEO, Niti Aayog, stated that work is on to create the supply network needed to produce and provide ever-increasing blends of petrol and ethanol, rising up to 100 percent. Even discussions for permissions for ethanol distribution are reportedly underway.
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