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On Sat, 25 Nov 2006 21:29:23 -0500, Larry wrote:
"Garland Gray II" wrote in : 4 strokes are great for a lot of reasons, but if fuel quality is questionable, they can be more trouble than 2 strokes. I've had fuel problems with a 9.9 Yamaha 4 stroke, and an ob mechanic said water or trash caused more problems w/4 strokes because of the smaller jets. Also, if you look back at the "good ol' days", remember when "winterizing" the old 2-stroker meant hauling it up the dock and putting it in the garage until spring? When you took it out in spring, just as greasy as you put it away, it wasn't all rusted up coated with oil like it always was. You poured PREMIX gas into it and drove away. We have a Nissan 8hp 4-stroker for a Foldabote 12 on Lionheart. The carb has been apart a few times, now, because it had raw gas in it that evaporated into solid shellac, plugging the jets so it wouldn't start. This wasn't an issue with the old PREMIX 2-stroker because the oil in the gas DIDN'T evaporate and kept the stuff left in the carbs in LIQUID form the new gas would simply remix with and away we went. My little Yamaha 3 with the gas tank on top is like that, too. It was stored for years and the premix still kept it from solidifying to shellac. Changing the oil on a marina dock or sailboat STILL sucks, too.... As to the 100:1 oilers...no thanks. 50:1 is too thin to oil crankcase bearings, no matter now much greenies and the EPA hype it. When I sold my 1997 Mercury Sport Jet 175hp-powered Sea Rayder, all 6 cylinders were within 5 pounds of their original compression and ran great on 40:1 PREMIX, the troublesome Mercury plastic oil injection pump and system having been removed as soon as I found out about the 2nd recall blowing powerheads with NO LUBRICATION. That boat's still running and the engine had well over 1000 hours on it....on PREMIX. Larry In the GOOD OLD DAYS gas was not 10 percent alchol and contained lead in major quanities. Oh by the way the EPA problem with 2 strokes is not so much the oil in the water but in the air. |
#2
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#3
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Larry,
I guess that you have not noticed that: A-Logic has little to do with environmental regulations. B-Much of the world is trying anything they can to shut down the best economy in the history of the world. The old 2 strokes were dirty engines. (I did some of the testing.) Their hydrocarbon emissions were outrageous. Anything that gets lubricated like an old 2-stroke won't wear out any time soon, but I have been on a could of mountain lakes that had an oil slick the likes of a tanker spill. For calibration, when I was working in one of those labs, the crew that was doing the evaporative emissions testing put the office Christmas tree into one of the evap sheds - It Didn't Pass - Many of the world's vocal liberals are very down on the good old USofA because we have something like 10% of the population and use 30% of the fossil fuel. They don't happen to notice that this produces 40+% of the worlds productivity and 15% of the worlds pollution*. (*Not including CO2) (The quoted statistics are close but not exact.) China has not been asked to reduce anything and they are still running wood fired steam locomotives and have the fastest declining air quality in the world. It is so bad that some coaches are expecting to have to shut some of the events at the next Olympics down because of the pollution. Why do you think Motorcycles are now required to have catalytic converters? Why do liberals think that a Hybrid vehicle is a better answer than a diesel? Why do they make noise about dependence on foreign oil and not let anybody go get what we have. (Canada has wells in most of the great lakes - we aren't allowed to, Cuba will soon be using Chinese investment to drill under the Florida straight - we can't do that either.) Matt Colie - environmentally conscious but educated and realistic Larry wrote: wrote in news:fufim2het1capo2e7k4p6kitgmq7vhtc3b@ 4ax.com: Oh by the way the EPA problem with 2 strokes is not so much the oil in the water but in the air. I wonder how that works?? Oil doesn't evaporate so it's not vapor pollution. I suppose the tiny bit of smoke trailing an outboard motor is pollution, probably .00000001% of what pours out of a single smoke stack at your electric plant, 24/7/365. Dead out on the river, 20 miles from the trailer, I want the simplest 2- stroke outboard with the fewest failing parts that a guy standing in the mud behind it along the banks can figure out what's wrong and patch it up to get home. No valves, no belts, minimal pumps, simple carburetion, hand startable (if necessary)....the motor with the fewest failure modes almost anyone with any sense can get running. A 2-stroke needs: A - Fuel B - Spark C - Cooling D - Prop Everything else is fluff. Every one of them needs a primer bulb, a fantastic troubleshooting tool for the fuel system and emergency fuel pump if the diaphram fails in their pulse pump. It amazes me the number of people who just sit there staring into it and don't THINK about what that little bulb can tell them if they'd just pump it and think about what is happening. I've helped lots of stranded boaters with it. "Pump the bulb for me.", I ask. "It squeezes but doesn't come back out.", he says. "Turn on the fuel shutoff valve.", I say...and away they go. "It pumps real easy.", he says. "Here, let me loan you some gas.", I respond. "It pumps and I see gas in the water behind the motor.", he says. "Your fuel pump diaphram has a hole in it pumping gas into one cylinder, flooding it....or the carb float is stuck. Pull the cover and we'll bypass the pump. You can squeeze the bulb while running it home." So easy....even on a carb'd 4- stroker. Impossible to fix on fuel injection and other high tech nonsense.... Larry |
#4
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![]() "Matt Colie" wrote in message ... Why do they make noise about dependence on foreign oil and not let anybody go get what we have. (Canada has wells in most of the great lakes - we aren't allowed to, Cuba will soon be using Chinese investment to drill under the Florida straight - we can't do that either.) Matt Colie - environmentally conscious but educated and realistic I'm all for energy-independence, but I cannot believe that oil wells on our Great Lakes would be a good idea. Oil spills from rigs on the oceans are bad enough -- but similar spills on the Lakes would be disasterous. |
#5
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"KLC Lewis" wrote in
: I'm all for energy-independence, but I cannot believe that oil wells on our Great Lakes would be a good idea. Oil spills from rigs on the oceans are bad enough -- but similar spills on the Lakes would be disasterous. Some of the finest fishing on the planet is right under those oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico....a whole new ecosystem that's just thriving.... all the way to the bottom! http://www.thejump.net/fishingarticl...gged-reefs.htm http://www.marshmission.com/coastal_...t/volume12.htm http://www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/regul...viron/rigs-to- reefs/information.html .....to name a few. Larry -- Guess what I want to do with the Little Drummer Boy's drum by Christmas Eve....rrrrump..pa-pum...pum...up his bum.... |
#6
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![]() "Larry" wrote in message ... "KLC Lewis" wrote in : I'm all for energy-independence, but I cannot believe that oil wells on our Great Lakes would be a good idea. Oil spills from rigs on the oceans are bad enough -- but similar spills on the Lakes would be disasterous. Some of the finest fishing on the planet is right under those oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico....a whole new ecosystem that's just thriving.... all the way to the bottom! http://www.thejump.net/fishingarticl...gged-reefs.htm http://www.marshmission.com/coastal_...t/volume12.htm http://www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/regul...viron/rigs-to- reefs/information.html ....to name a few. Larry -- Guess what I want to do with the Little Drummer Boy's drum by Christmas Eve....rrrrump..pa-pum...pum...up his bum.... Sure, plant the rigs as artificial reefs and don't drill. That's fine with me. |
#7
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On Sun, 26 Nov 2006 14:47:57 -0600, in message
"KLC Lewis" wrote: "Matt Colie" wrote in message ... Why do they make noise about dependence on foreign oil and not let anybody go get what we have. (Canada has wells in most of the great lakes - we aren't allowed to, Cuba will soon be using Chinese investment to drill under the Florida straight - we can't do that either.) Matt Colie - environmentally conscious but educated and realistic I'm all for energy-independence, but I cannot believe that oil wells on our Great Lakes would be a good idea. Oil spills from rigs on the oceans are bad enough -- but similar spills on the Lakes would be disasterous. Whose Great Lakes? Keep in mind that we share them with the US. Or are you posting from the US and speaking only of Lake Michigan? There's already plenty of wellheads under Lake Erie where the shallow depths make drilling quite easy and Lake Erie is in way better shape than it was 40 years ago. Ryk |
#8
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![]() "Ryk" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Nov 2006 14:47:57 -0600, in message "KLC Lewis" wrote: I'm all for energy-independence, but I cannot believe that oil wells on our Great Lakes would be a good idea. Oil spills from rigs on the oceans are bad enough -- but similar spills on the Lakes would be disasterous. Whose Great Lakes? Keep in mind that we share them with the US. Or are you posting from the US and speaking only of Lake Michigan? There's already plenty of wellheads under Lake Erie where the shallow depths make drilling quite easy and Lake Erie is in way better shape than it was 40 years ago. Ryk By "our Great Lakes," I was referring to humanity. But, of humanity, naturally Americans come first. Just ask any of our politicians. |
#9
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KLC,
I don't like the thought of spills either, but three Canadian companies have a total of 450+ wells for both oil and natural gas in Lake Erie alone. They seem to manage just fine (with gear and technology from American suppliers). Recently, I was told by someone that has studied these problems for many years that most of the oil on Lake Erie comes from untrapped storm drains. The last big one was the Rouge River about three years ago. We have the opportunity to correct a lot of problems if we pick the real ones instead of the "politically correct" ones. This has been my problem with the "evironmental movement" since they forced cars to get much reduced fuel economy in favor of maginally reduced tailpipe emissions. Remember the early cat cars of the mid seventies? Matt KLC Lewis wrote: "Matt Colie" wrote in message ... Why do they make noise about dependence on foreign oil and not let anybody go get what we have. (Canada has wells in most of the great lakes - we aren't allowed to, Cuba will soon be using Chinese investment to drill under the Florida straight - we can't do that either.) Matt Colie - environmentally conscious but educated and realistic I'm all for energy-independence, but I cannot believe that oil wells on our Great Lakes would be a good idea. Oil spills from rigs on the oceans are bad enough -- but similar spills on the Lakes would be disasterous. |
#10
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Exactly. You can't force technology faster just to meet an arbitrary goal
dreamed up by a beaurocrat. And the sick thing about it is that whoever dreamed up those regs goes to bed thinking "I saved the world again today". "Matt Colie" wrote in message ... This has been my problem with the "evironmental movement" since they forced cars to get much reduced fuel economy in favor of maginally reduced tailpipe emissions. Remember the early cat cars of the mid seventies? Matt |
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