The ingredients in the auto fuel give it a propensity to hold water in suspension, thus the corrosion.Explain what auto fuel had to do with that. I just want to learn.
The ingredients in the auto fuel give it a propensity to hold water in suspension, thus the corrosion.
That is my humble Opinion. Some one will be along shortly to argue about it.
"This 150 was stored with out any preservation and sat from 1987 to last month."
Probably no E10 available in 1987
That is a requirement.Are you documenting this whole restore?
Didn't the "Water removal" additive products consist of ethanol?
Alcohol, yes. But I don't believe any of them were ethanol.
That's actually one nice thing about running ethanol occasionally. It should keep the fuel system relatively clear of water.
I think most alcohol fuel additives are isopropyl. Don't most gasolines have ethanol now? E10, E15, E85, the number being the percentage of ethanol?Alcohol, yes. But I don't believe any of them were ethanol.
That's actually one nice thing about running ethanol occasionally. It should keep the fuel system relatively clear of water.
I think most of them are isopropyl. Don't most gasolines have ethanol now? E10, E15, E85, the number being the percentage of ethanol?
I think most alcohol fuel additives are isopropyl. Don't most gasolines have ethanol now? E10, E15, E85, the number being the percentage of ethanol?
I just wondered if somebody had put some water absorbent additive in the tank and captured the moisture.
Ethanol (E10) gas got really going in the early 90's after the clean air act (1990) got the gas man to start adding oxygenates to gas in several places, MTBE or ethanol are popular.
If you were talking about MoGas with ethanol, yes, it could hold some water. Methyl tert-butyl ether and ethyl tert-butyl ether additives, no. Although 2-propanol can be added, and could hold some water, 2-propanol doesn't seem to be added to gasoline by the suppliers because it affects the vapor pressure adversely although there are ethers that have been used with 2-propanol to keep the vapor pressure in line. So- unless he had some ethanol containing gas or added a fuel-line anti-freeze, I'd also consider condensation or water already in the tank as more of a culprit.The ingredients in the auto fuel give it a propensity to hold water in suspension, thus the corrosion.
That is my humble Opinion. Some one will be along shortly to argue about it.