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Speaking of ethanol...
I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) |
Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
On 4/27/13 10:57 AM, iBoaterer wrote:
In article , says... I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) If you have a Northern Tool by you they carry Sea Foam. Local auto parts store had it. I'm not aware of a Northern Tool anywhere near here. I think I recall seeing one in Norfolk, but that's hours away. |
Speaking of ethanol...
On 4/27/2013 9:23 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) Wrong girl! |
Speaking of ethanol...
On 4/27/2013 11:01 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 4/27/13 10:57 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) If you have a Northern Tool by you they carry Sea Foam. Local auto parts store had it. I'm not aware of a Northern Tool anywhere near here. I think I recall seeing one in Norfolk, but that's hours away. Walmart caries Sea Foam. |
Speaking of ethanol...
In article ,
says... On Sat, 27 Apr 2013 11:01:55 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 4/27/13 10:57 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) If you have a Northern Tool by you they carry Sea Foam. Local auto parts store had it. I'm not aware of a Northern Tool anywhere near here. I think I recall seeing one in Norfolk, but that's hours away. They have seafoam just about anywhere that handles oil, auto parts or boat stuff around here. It is supposed to be some kind of miracle potion. I have never had it fix anything. It's purpose isn't to fix mechanical failures, so that's probably why you haven't had it fix any. |
Speaking of ethanol...
On Sat, 27 Apr 2013 12:53:38 -0400, Hank© wrote:
On 4/27/2013 11:01 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 4/27/13 10:57 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) If you have a Northern Tool by you they carry Sea Foam. Local auto parts store had it. I'm not aware of a Northern Tool anywhere near here. I think I recall seeing one in Norfolk, but that's hours away. Walmart caries Sea Foam. Must be good stuff! |
Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 4/27/13 12:50 PM, wrote: On Sat, 27 Apr 2013 11:01:55 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 4/27/13 10:57 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... I was back at the lawn equipment parts store this morning, and the counter guy also suggested a product called "Sea Foam," as something that preserves gasoline and also does some clean out. Looked it up on line. I'm going to buy a can at the local auto parts store. Mower starts fine after I hooked the choke cable up to the right carb control rod hole. Yes, I put it in the wrong hole. A girl told me that once about 50 years ago, and then she slapped me...real hard. Nothing bad happened this time, except the choke wasn't working. No slaps. :) If you have a Northern Tool by you they carry Sea Foam. Local auto parts store had it. I'm not aware of a Northern Tool anywhere near here. I think I recall seeing one in Norfolk, but that's hours away. They have seafoam just about anywhere that handles oil, auto parts or boat stuff around here. It is supposed to be some kind of miracle potion. I have never had it fix anything. Perhaps your problems aren't easily fixable? :) (Hard to resist a straight line like that!) Dumb. |
Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
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Speaking of ethanol...
In article ,
says... "iBoaterer" wrote in message ... In article , says... Every problem I have heard about ethanol involved old gas but "old" is measured in months not years.. True, the same with gas without ethanol. -------------------------------- Only as far as oxygenated gas goes .... which is what the ethanol doped gas is. In the US it has pretty much replaced MTBE as an oxygenating agent. Gas made 20 years before the introduction of oxygenated fuel had a much longer shelf life. You can store it longer in a non-vented container that won't allow moisture to enter during expansion and contraction, but that's not the case with cars and boats. The volatile compounds of the gas (those that make it go POOF!) evaporate. |
Speaking of ethanol...
In article ,
says... In article , says... Every problem I have heard about ethanol involved old gas but "old" is measured in months not years.. True, the same with gas without ethanol. Nope and yep. I've run one and a half year old untreated E10 many times with no issues. Had to dump some 2 year old weed wacker gas once. So I measure old in years. Not months. Measure "old" how you want to. I've seen references that the API (American Petroleum Institute) recommends storing gas no more than 2 years, but can't find the cite on the API website. That's gas not treated with "stabilizers." I've also seen firsthand reports of a guy testing untreated gas stored in a jerry can for use in his lawnmower. He used the last of it after 8 years and it worked fine. He had a small lawn. Nearly everything you see about gas going bad fast is from people pumping "stabilizers." Seems they they add that stuff not because they've had a problem with "old gas," but because it's "common wisdom." Everybody has to decide what works for them. I don't live in a humid area, my equipment is mine, and maybe I'm blessed. There's 3 common causes of gas going bad: 1. Contamination. Buy uncontaminated gas, and don't contaminate it. 2. Evaporation. Keep your gas in unvented containers. 3. Oxidation. Unvented containers, and keep cool. Heat speeds oxidation. This is so called "stale" gas. You can easily spot the bad color if you pour a bit in a clear container before you put it in your engine. Refineries add anti-oxidants, but if your stored gas is getting stale, go with an aftermarket additive. Ethanoled gas is just a whipping boy. Complaints about old gas and watered gas long predates E10. |
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