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#31
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"Roger (K8RI)" wrote:
I can only give antidotal evidence, but I never drain the tanks in the tractor, generator, snow blowers, lawn mowers...etc. Some of it ends up in there for several years and I've never had mo gas go bad. HOWEVER...When I shut down any one of them and know it will be for a while, I do shut off the gas and let the thing run until the carb is dry and the engine quits. If you leave the carb full of gas the stuff will slowly evaporate over long periods and that will form "gunk". Gas in my big generator may end up as old as two years. I turn on the gas, give it time to fill the carb float bowl (just a few minutes) and it's never failed to start. Gum forms when fuel evaporates. If it can't evaporate I can't see how it could form deposits. With the stuff still being good after two years, I really don't believe it breaks down with age, or at least not nearly as fast as some say. Even back on the farm in "the old days" we never had problems with gas going bad in storage or in the tractors over the winter. We had both above and below ground storage. This has been my experience. Down here in the south (we probably don't have "winterizers"), you'd have syrup coming out the fuel lines, or we used to. Dunno, I don't ever let fuel sit that long anymore... And thats been my experience... |
#32
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Down here in the south (we probably don't have "winterizers"), you'd
have syrup coming out the fuel lines, or we used to. Dunno, I don't ever let fuel sit that long anymore... And thats been my experience...- Hide quoted text - Hey Darrel -- thanks to you (and your Dad) for sending us the Cajun spices! We'll put it to goooooood use... ;-) (Darrel and his Dad ended up being pressed into doing most of the grillmeister work for our Oshkosh Fly-In Pool Party at the hotel last July. I was so danged busy running people over from the airport that we'd STILL be waiting to eat if I had done my usual cook duties, too!) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#33
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![]() "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk at wow way d0t com wrote in message news:t6Odna1iRNU0UHDbnZ2dnUVZ_rGrnZ2d@wideopenwest .com... "Kyle Boatright" wrote in message ... ... Another foolish buyer trick is buying a fixer-upper. Generally, an airplane's value is LESS than the sum of its parts. Take a $30k C-172 or Cherokee, add new paint @ $8k, a new interior @ $5k, a new panel @ $15k, an engine overhaul @ $15k and you still have an airplane worth $50k or less despite the $70k+ you've invested. I don't know about that. My dad went through several fixer-uppers and did just fine with them. Of course, you can't just hand the aircraft and a credit card to someone and say "fix it". Sweat equity wasn't included in my equation, although some owners put plenty of it into their aircraft. In my instance, I built my own airplane, so I know all about sweat equity. And blood equity. And bye-bye girlfriend equity. However, many people lack the time, skills, or willpower to tackle a job as big as painting an airplane or rewiring a panel or rebuilding an engine. And there is nothing wrong with that. So for those people, it is wise to buy the airplane they want, because it'll be far cheaper than buying a fixer upper and bringing it up to their standard. That's all I was saying... KB Example - $8K for paint??? Most of that cost is prep work which you can do yourself. I spent more then a few hours stripping paint as a kid. I particularly remember a Navion - there's a TON of rivet heads to be cleaned when you strip a Navion... After agreeing on how it was to be painted (I don't remember the details, but I thing they aggreed to white with some brown stripes) the old man flew it off somewhere to get the paint sprayed (and I assume that he did the masking work too). It came back in a real sharp looking maroon with cream trim paint job... Overhaul - you have to have a mechanic that will work with you and sign off on your work. (Pop used to be a crew chief in the Army Air Corps) It helps if you enjoy doing that kind of work. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#34
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Down here in the south (we probably don't have "winterizers"), you'd have syrup coming out the fuel lines, or we used to. Dunno, I don't ever let fuel sit that long anymore... And thats been my experience...- Hide quoted text - Hey Darrel -- thanks to you (and your Dad) for sending us the Cajun spices! We'll put it to goooooood use... ;-) As "good cajuns", we should always carry those with us, our bad. I did bring our very best local BBQ Sauce for you though... (Darrel and his Dad ended up being pressed into doing most of the grillmeister work for our Oshkosh Fly-In Pool Party at the hotel last July. I was so danged busy running people over from the airport that we'd STILL be waiting to eat if I had done my usual cook duties, too!) Not a problem, glad to be able to help out. I dunno what the future holds for a repeat, as we've made our trip to Mecca!!! But you(r) people do grow some excellent corn!!! |
#35
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Following up on the pilgrimage topic, since people who have made the trip to
Mecca add 'al Hajji ' to their names, perhaps 'al Oshi ' is appropriate for the Oshkosh crowd? -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel A frog in a well does not know the great sea. "Darrel Toepfer" wrote in message . 18... Jay Honeck wrote: Down here in the south (we probably don't have "winterizers"), you'd have syrup coming out the fuel lines, or we used to. Dunno, I don't ever let fuel sit that long anymore... And thats been my experience...- Hide quoted text - Hey Darrel -- thanks to you (and your Dad) for sending us the Cajun spices! We'll put it to goooooood use... ;-) As "good cajuns", we should always carry those with us, our bad. I did bring our very best local BBQ Sauce for you though... (Darrel and his Dad ended up being pressed into doing most of the grillmeister work for our Oshkosh Fly-In Pool Party at the hotel last July. I was so danged busy running people over from the airport that we'd STILL be waiting to eat if I had done my usual cook duties, too!) Not a problem, glad to be able to help out. I dunno what the future holds for a repeat, as we've made our trip to Mecca!!! But you(r) people do grow some excellent corn!!! |
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