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#131
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Gasohol
Hit my thought right on the head! This crap is absolutely amazing. Hard to believe that there is any way this stuff is called 'gasoline.' Interesting what definitions pop up when you do a web search for 'gasoline definition'. I see the hydrocarbon bit by most, but there are now 'states' changing the definition to include the gasohol definition also... sheeze..... The really interesting thing is that "we" keep electing those guys... |
#132
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Gasohol
"Morgans" writes:
How sure are we that the gasohol in service station tanks contain no water? I can assure you they will. When a pipeline delivers a tender [batch] of gasoline into storage tankage; they let it sit for a while, then drain the bottom of the tank ("water-draw") until they get gas... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#133
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Gasohol
"Roger (K8RI)" wrote:
I never drain the tanks on my lawn morwer, snow blower, yard tractor, or push lawn mower. I've never seen car gas break down even after several years. -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- For decades, old leftover mogas ALWAYS worked fine for me too. Then came a Spring season when my lawn mower refused to start. The cause was... old flat gas. It even smelled weird/stale. Didn't hardly wanna' burn with a match. After draining/replacing the old gas with fresh, all was well. -Barnyard BOb- |
#134
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Gasohol
Not looking for water, we're looking for alcohol...
Actually many of us are curious about each, and some of use would be interested to know both. That is the supposed beauty of Alka Seltzer, is that it fizzes on both water *and* alcohol... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#135
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Gasohol
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007 18:15:55 -0700, "RST Engineering"
wrote: Aqua (as in "water") Aquatec test strips check for WATER, not alcohol. Google Alcohol Test Strip and you get a million hits on how to test for booze on the breath, but not a word about gasahol. Google Gasahol Test Strip and you come up with nothing usable. Um . . . yeah. I missed the part where the thread morphed from "sticking" the tanks at the gas station. Don |
#136
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Gasohol
("Roger (K8RI)" wrote)
What I have seen is the stuff evaporate in the carburetors and leave a shelac. However I always turn off the gas and run the carbs dry. The next season I turn the gase on, wait a few minutes, prime and pull. They usually start on the first pull. I would run Dad's snowblower a couple-three-four times per summer. 1. Mother's Day. Run the snowblower out in driveway. Yes, rev it up some. 2. Put in about a 1/2 quart of fresh gas. (It was run dry the last time) 3. Repeat around The 4th, again in September/October, and again before Thanksgiving. 4. Do something else while the snowblower was running. Front "step" with a beer often got the vote. 5. I tried all the other stuff. I liked this method best ...for the snowblower. (I think the idea of running the snowblower, in shorts and a t-shirt, was the real appeal to this method) Montblack The boat - I did the fogging oil routine, emptied the carbs and filters, blew out the lines, sloshed the 6 gallon tanks with straight oil, etc. |
#137
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Gasohol
("David Lesher" wrote)
I can assure you they will. When a pipeline delivers a tender [batch] of gasoline into storage tankage; they let it sit for a while, then drain the bottom of the tank ("water-draw") until they get gas... At the Brewery (in the 80's) during beer changes, there were these sight glasses in the lines - at the valves. We'd flush out the line with water, watch the sight glass ...when we saw bubbles or a definite color change, we'd wait a few seconds then throw the valve. The water in the line was pumped out onto the floor, and/or "dumped" with a few spins of the bowl (a.k.a. the filler). Montblack |
#138
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Gasohol
I ran out of gas twice with my latest vehicle. I had it before the gasohol
change and I knew where it ran out because I intentionally ran it out while I was carrying gas for the plane. Since gasohol, I've run out twice well above the empty mark set before. Had to shake the car some to get it going when I put gas in, too. mike "Bryan Martin" wrote in message ... With gasohol, the gas stations no longer have to bother draining out the accumulated water from their tanks. The small amount of water that condenses out in the tanks simply dissolves into the next load of gasohol that gets poured into the tank and you pump a little bit of it into your car every time you fill up. Of course, if you get too much water in the gas, it settles out to the bottom of the tank and takes all the alcohol with it. You end up with a mixture at the bottom that won't burn worth a damn and the rest of the gasoline with a much reduced octane rating. |
#139
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Gasohol
In article ,
"Morgans" wrote: "Cubdriver" wrote Well, the alky presumably was shipped in full tanks / barrels / whatever, so we can hope it's undiluted. But, it is _very_ difficult (it takes some expensive chemistry tricks) to get all of the water distilled out of alcohol, in other words, stronger than around 98% alcohol. Is that all the alky producers go for, or do they use the expensive tricks to get the last two percentage points of water out of the alky? I doubt that they would go for the expensive tricks, since the alcohol will absorb moisture out of the air and from the bottom of the fuel tanks as soon as it contacts either. There is no point in trying for higher purity. |
#140
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Gasohol
Call up Sportys and tell them you need an MSDS for it.
"Tri-Pacer" wrote in message . .. Sportys used to sell a test kit that contained a chemical that would turn purple if added to a fuel sample that was gasahol. I have no idea of what the chemical was. It was a very easy to test the fuel. They claim that their supplier no longer exists. I bought a bunch of the kits and have about 1/2 a vial of the chemical left. I sure would like to know what the reagent is that was used. Cheers: Paul N1431A |
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