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how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so
that it stays 50:1? For example: I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. Add the oil, shake the can. Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 14:39:02 -0800 (PST), Mel wrote:
How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. Add the oil, shake the can. Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com If your can is a little over half full, put in four gallons of gas and add 10 oz of oil, plus a couple drops. -- John H |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
"Mel" wrote in message
... How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. Add the oil, shake the can. Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel Siphon the gas into the near-empty tank of your car, then fill the car's tank. (Per my mechanic, this is not a problem). Start from scratch with the boat fuel mix. |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
"Mel" wrote in message ... How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. Add the oil, shake the can. Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com Go to your nearest Vespa scooter dealer and buy the little mixing cup. When you go to the gas station, note how many liters/gallons you pump into the gas can. Fill the mixing cup to the corresponding mark with the proper two stroke oil. Add the oil to the gas can, shake a bit, and away you go. |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
On Feb 16, 5:39*pm, Mel wrote:
How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: *I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. *I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. *I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. *How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. *Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. *Add the oil, shake the can. *Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com Go sit under a bridge and ask everyone who crosses three questions... |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
I'd just mix for 5 gallons. At 50:1, I dont think its gonna matter. If in doubt, mix a little heavier. You wont hurt the motor. You could dump 2 quarts on "justwaitafreakinminute" , then mix the rest. |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
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how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
On Feb 17, 7:54*am, HK wrote:
wrote: On Feb 16, 5:39 pm, Mel wrote: How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: *I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. *I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. *I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. *How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. *Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. *Add the oil, shake the can. *Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com Go sit under a bridge and ask everyone who crosses three questions... Wisdom from your previous life as a troll?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Direct from Harry Krause: Been a long, long time since you posted anything useful or original about boats. What sort of boat do you have, and where, generally, do you boat? Got anything on topic to add here? |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 14:39:02 -0800, Mel wrote:
How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. Add the oil, shake the can. Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com This is what I use to figure out how many tsp.(teaspoons) of oil to add to a pint of gas for a 50:1 fuel ratio for gas string trimmer. 1 pint to tsp. = 96 tsp. Rounded off to 100 tsp. A smig over 2 tsp./pint of gas works. A pint almost fills the string trimmer and I don't need to mix any more than I can use at a time. If I need another half of a tank. A heaping tsp. of oil to a cup of gas works. Now you figure how many pints of gas you add to the tank then add two heaping tsp./pint. 2cups = pint 2pints = quart 4 quarts = gallon Do the math yourself from here. I have a syringe that is used to measure medication in cc's and tsb. that I use for the string trimmer. HTH |
how to compute oil mix ratio with partially filled gas can
On Feb 17, 7:54*am, HK wrote:
wrote: On Feb 16, 5:39 pm, Mel wrote: How do I add gas and oil to a gas can half-filled with 50:1 mixture so that it stays 50:1? For example: *I have a 10 gallon can on my boat filled a little more than half way with of 50:1 mix. *I can't tell exactly how much 50:1 mix is in the can. *I am at a gas station and want to top off the can and yet keep the mix at 50:1. *How would you do this? Here are some possibilities I can see: 1. Put in a known quantity of gas that stops short of filling up the tank. *Calculate how much oil is needed for that known quantity of gas. *Add the oil, shake the can. *Accept how much empty space there is at the top of the can. 2. Fill up a another can with maybe 6 gallons of gas and add the correct amount of oil (5/8 of a cup,.. or 10 tablespoons maybe). Shake up the can and pour it into the 10-gallon can. Any ideas? Thanks Mel mricflo at dr dot com Go sit under a bridge and ask everyone who crosses three questions... Wisdom from your previous life as a troll?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I will admit to trolling here and there, will you?? |
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