You can water your plants with it....:devil:
No, not the intestinal kind. If I have not run my boat for a year and a half, people tell me the gas in the tank goes bad. I have a water/fuel separator but I have been told that once it is bad, it is bad. You mean I can't add a couple of gallons of race fuel to bring the half full tanks back to life? What can you do with 30 gallons of "bad" gas?
You can water your plants with it....:devil:
I wouldnt run it in my boat. maybe put it in your lawn mower and offer free mowing to everyone on your street. I wouldnt run it, it can gel and make your boat run like crap, or clog up jets. there is some chart that says the octane rating goes down over a period of time, but aside from that I just wouldnt do it.
I had 30 gallons of gas that was 1.5 years old in my tanks. I pumped them in to my truck and burned it.
I've heard gas looses octane over time.
I siphoned mine out and ran it through the truck also. It had only been in the boat since last August. Seemed to do fine there, but I wasn't about to run it through my boat engine!!!
Ken F
I was told by a knowledageable source that gas will lose about 1 octane per month while stored in a vented tank.
I was told by a knowledageable source that gas will lose about 1 octane per month while stored in a vented tank.
So it can be rejuvinated??
No, not the intestinal kind. If I have not run my boat for a year and a half, people tell me the gas in the tank goes bad. I have a water/fuel separator but I have been told that once it is bad, it is bad. You mean I can't add a couple of gallons of race fuel to bring the half full tanks back to life? What can you do with 30 gallons of "bad" gas?
sell it to exxon for 499 a gallon :idea:
add some kind of additive and run it. You'll burn it real fast anyway!
Gasoline is made of many "fractions". Some fractions are designed to vaporize at lower temps and comes right out just sitting in the Summer. The heavier fractions are left behind. Winter gas goes bad faster than summer gas, etc.
It might gum up but if you drive the boat fast enough it'll blow out sooo fast it won't have time to cause a problem. At least that is my theory.
CC
The basic scoop:
The shelf life of gasoline depends on the type of gas and the storage conditions and can range from a couple months to a couple years. One wild card is that gas you buy at the pump may already have been in storage for anywhere from days to months.
What makes gas go stale? Usually the first thing that happens is the light hydrocarbons in it evaporate, leaving behind a heavier, less peppy product. Gasoline is an ideal motor vehicle fuel partly because it vaporizes readily to form a combustible mix with air. If it sits unused, however, its more volatile components waft away, leading to poorer engine performance. It's hard to tell how much punch your gas has lost without scientific testing, but don't worrythough your engine might start a little harder, it'll still run (assuming it ran before), and there's little risk in burning the fuel if this is all that's gone wrong.
The second cause of bad gas is oxidationsome of the hydrocarbons in the fuel react with oxygen to produce new compounds, almost all of them worse than what you started with. When oxidation becomes a problem, you'll know it without lab tests--the gasoline gives off a sour odor. If you pour some into a glass container, you'll see it's turned dark, and you might find small, solid particles of gum. Using oxidized gasoline is a bad idea, since the gum can clog your fuel filter/jets/etc, create deposits in your fuel system and generally hurt performance.