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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 1 Apr 2009 15:39:05 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote: He advised to NEVER buy fuel with ethanol in it and never keep fuel for more than a couple of weeks. Unless I buy only at marinas, it will be tough to find ethanol free fuel. In Iowa, where they make the ethanol, every vendor offers three grades of gas, one of which has ethanol. As for keeping fuel more than two weeks, that is just insane. How long do you think it is in the pipeline before it sits around the tank farm? The local small town convenience store sells 100 octane gas during the racing season. Very expensive it is, low lead 100 avgas is much cheaper. Casady |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 02 Apr 2009 12:36:01 -0400, wrote:
Storing gasoline above ground in a small tank (car, lawnmower, outboard motor tank, etc) greatly increases the rate at which moisture is absorbed. The underground tanks maintain a pretty constant temperature. Moisture has no particular effect on the formation of gum, which is the issue under discussion. Casady |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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wrote:
On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 10:14:37 -0400, Jim22208 wrote: wrote: On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 07:22:26 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 02 Apr 2009 12:36:01 -0400, wrote: Storing gasoline above ground in a small tank (car, lawnmower, outboard motor tank, etc) greatly increases the rate at which moisture is absorbed. The underground tanks maintain a pretty constant temperature. Moisture has no particular effect on the formation of gum, which is the issue under discussion. Casady The subject, stated on the subject line, is bad fuel. When talking about problems with storing gas for long periods, water is a bigger problem than formation of gum. You can retard or prevent the foramtion of gum. You can't do much about phase separation of water in fuel. Ah, but there is something tou can do. Look up a product called Water-Zorb. It really works like magic. That's just another brand name for Dri-Gas. It's basically just alcohol, like the alcohol that caused the problem. Adding more alcohol may get you going in the short term, but will also likely shorten the life of your engine. There is no treatment you can add to gasoline that will eliminate phase separation. I've tested it and used it for several years. It works. It's not dry gas. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Apr 3, 10:53*am, wrote:
On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 10:14:37 -0400, Jim22208 wrote: wrote: On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 07:22:26 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 02 Apr 2009 12:36:01 -0400, wrote: Storing gasoline above ground in a small tank (car, lawnmower, outboard motor tank, etc) *greatly increases the rate at which moisture is absorbed. The underground tanks maintain a pretty constant temperature. Moisture has no particular effect on the formation of gum, which is the issue under discussion. Casady The subject, stated on the subject line, *is bad fuel. When talking about problems with storing gas for long periods, water is a bigger problem than formation of gum. You can retard or prevent the foramtion of gum. You can't do much about phase separation of water in fuel. Ah, but there is something tou can do. Look up a product called Water-Zorb. It really works like magic. That's just another *brand name for Dri-Gas. It's basically just alcohol, like the alcohol that caused the problem. Adding more alcohol may get you going in the short term, but will also likely shorten the life of your engine. There is no treatment you can add to gasoline that will eliminate phase separation.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - There are products, however, that will protect against phase separation happening in the first place. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 09:37:39 -0400, wrote:
On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 07:22:26 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 02 Apr 2009 12:36:01 -0400, wrote: Storing gasoline above ground in a small tank (car, lawnmower, outboard motor tank, etc) greatly increases the rate at which moisture is absorbed. The underground tanks maintain a pretty constant temperature. Moisture has no particular effect on the formation of gum, which is the issue under discussion. Casady The subject, stated on the subject line, is bad fuel. When talking about problems with storing gas for long periods, water is a bigger problem than formation of gum. You can retard or prevent the foramtion of gum. You can't do much about phase separation of water in fuel. Good fuel that happens to be in the same container as water is still good fuel, you can start a new thread about separating water from fuel if you like, but good fuel floating on water is still good fuel. This is normally found in all tankers and most storage tanks. They strain out the dead shrimp before it gets to you tank. As for preventing gum, they mostly do all that needs doing at the refinery. We have been leaving gas over the winter in the same runabout for fifty years without a trace of gum. No problems with water either. The only gum I have ever seen was in a lawn mower from a thrift shop, and for all I know the varnish and gas were thirty years old. The mower was that old. You might not want drain valves for gasoline possibly dripping into the bilge, but Diesel tanks should have quick drains, same as all the light airplanes. [I presume heavy planes have them as well.] The references to phase separation that I have found refer to water washing the ethanol from fuel. When you then remove the water layer, in numerous ways the boating community seems not to use, the gasoline will be a point or so lower in octane since ethanol rates 100+ octane, [as do methanol, propane, toluene, acetone, 2,2,5 trimethyl pentane]. That last I threw in because it is the reference fuel for the octane scale. Casady |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Richard Casady" wrote in message ... On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 09:37:39 -0400, wrote: On Fri, 03 Apr 2009 07:22:26 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 02 Apr 2009 12:36:01 -0400, wrote: Storing gasoline above ground in a small tank (car, lawnmower, outboard motor tank, etc) greatly increases the rate at which moisture is absorbed. The underground tanks maintain a pretty constant temperature. Moisture has no particular effect on the formation of gum, which is the issue under discussion. Casady The subject, stated on the subject line, is bad fuel. When talking about problems with storing gas for long periods, water is a bigger problem than formation of gum. You can retard or prevent the foramtion of gum. You can't do much about phase separation of water in fuel. Good fuel that happens to be in the same container as water is still good fuel, you can start a new thread about separating water from fuel if you like, but good fuel floating on water is still good fuel. This is normally found in all tankers and most storage tanks. They strain out the dead shrimp before it gets to you tank. As for preventing gum, they mostly do all that needs doing at the refinery. We have been leaving gas over the winter in the same runabout for fifty years without a trace of gum. No problems with water either. The only gum I have ever seen was in a lawn mower from a thrift shop, and for all I know the varnish and gas were thirty years old. The mower was that old. You might not want drain valves for gasoline possibly dripping into the bilge, but Diesel tanks should have quick drains, same as all the light airplanes. [I presume heavy planes have them as well.] The references to phase separation that I have found refer to water washing the ethanol from fuel. When you then remove the water layer, in numerous ways the boating community seems not to use, the gasoline will be a point or so lower in octane since ethanol rates 100+ octane, [as do methanol, propane, toluene, acetone, 2,2,5 trimethyl pentane]. That last I threw in because it is the reference fuel for the octane scale. Casady My BIL took in an 8hp shredder to have it fixed, as it had sat for a couple of years. The mechanic said that "the carburetor was so gummed up, he had to replace it." And he did kindly with a USED one, which he charged $125 for including labor. I believe I could have soaked and brushed it into usability. Steve |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 4 Apr 2009 09:49:31 -0600, "SteveB"
wrote: My BIL took in an 8hp shredder to have it fixed, as it had sat for a couple of years. The mechanic said that "the carburetor was so gummed up, he had to replace it." And he did kindly with a USED one, which he charged $125 for including labor. I believe I could have soaked and brushed it into usability. Replacing the carburetor is common practice in my experience. Cleaning an old one is labor intensive and there is some risk that it may take more than one cleaning/rebuilding to get it right. That's OK if you are doing the work yourself and have lots of spare time but the guys making a living at it like to turn the work around quickly and get it right the first time. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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#10
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Richard Casady" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 04 Apr 2009 12:25:03 -0500, wrote: The EPA may have also banned the chemical they used in the carb "hot tank". Back in the olden days a few hours in a hot tank would make them look like brand new and all the varnish, gum or whatever was gone. Blow it out with a little shop air, put a "kit" in it and you were good to go. The hot tank I know about is lye and is used by engine rebuilders to soak the engine blocks and other parts. It will dissolve many non ferrous metals, especially aluminum. I use the same stuff to dissolve aluminum to make hydrogen for the UFO balloons. The stuff used for carbs is similar to many paint removers, except it is not a gel. Smells similar. Maybe methylene chloride, but I don't really know. Used at room temperature. Some evil ****, whatever it is. Casady UFO balloons? Do you have a secret hobby? Eisboch |
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