FireFighterHill
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Alot of guys in the landscaping industry swear by this stuff
Star brite Star Tron Gasoline Additive
Star brite Star Tron Gasoline Additive
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You've stepped into one of my areas of competency. I worked in a vehicle emissions lab for about five years analyzing gasoline before and after it went through an engine.The way I understand the use the ethanol is really just a filler or extender. Has very little to no fuel value in most engines. Anyone know of this for fact or bs?
Ah Randy, it's great that your life is so simple. I spent the early part of this winter replacing all of the rubber fuel hoses, fuel pump diaphragm, and gaskets on my Bobcat. This spring, it was the float valve on my tiller, and the fuel hose.... again. I am having good luck with my tractor, as it is gravity feed, all steel line, and a stainless steel float valve... no rubber anywhere. But that is it. I also had to rebuild the carburetor on my chain saw, and weed wacker, and replace the rubber with the alcohol kit.y........... oh i have just seen alot about newer fuels ruining types of lines, not a prob, they said all that about the new diesels and absolutely none of that has ever happened either, its opinions, if U want and like those answers thats up to U, its your truck, your truck ran on crap in service , its an upgrade no matter how u look at it today.
Hi Randy,Thanks! I am glad too Well it never happened to me or anyone i know, I guess i have to ask why does it not happen to everybody?, just wondering, and it is simple, as for anything they add to extend gas, I think its stupid, I also think ethanol is stupid, but over all what i said is true, it will not hurt his Jeep. and the basics still hold true in what i said.
Just to fill in a little here - most people who seriously drive Corvairs have gone to electric fuel pumps. Nobody seemed to be able to make an E10-compatible diaphragm material for that pump for whatever stupid reason. I didn't mean to minimize the effect of ethanol on elastomers - I just thought it was a well-known problem, so didn't spend much time on it. The question asked was about the quality of ethanol as a fuel - it's a pretty decent fuel, it's just not chemically compatible with a lot of the rubbers used in older gasoline fuel systems.The M38 Jeep is almost identical in terms of the fuel system to my '70 Bobcat. There will be problems with the fuel pump, and if a newer carburetor kit has been installed... one that has a rubber tip on the float valve, there will be problems with it sticking too. Rubber hoses become brittle from the alcohol, and will crack. It is just a matter of time.
-Chuck
Yep, you're right. I was thinking of distillate spiked with reformate, which is a primitive blend, but can have pretty good octane numbers. Reformate is made from naphtha (white gas/Coleman fuel) but ISN'T naphtha.Are you sure coleman fuel is that high of a octane rating? I just googled it and the consensus is that its octane is 50-55.
So what's your take on ethylene glycol? It's just as environmentally mobile and just as unfamiliar to soil bacteria...Awsome, I deal with gasoline in groundwater and will say MTBE does not need to be handled by the public. Not that the effects are really toxic just it moves too freely through our world.
I might just be stripping ethanol from my fuel before storage now. This has been a pretty useful topic so far.
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