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How long is stabilized Gasoline good for?
Just got my engines back and installed. I have been down since August 2006, Aprox 1/2 tank of fuel ..used the correct amount of STABIL ... HOW LONG IS THE FUEL STILL GOOD? should I mix Fresh gas with the old this spring ?.. the boat is ALWAYS stored inside rack stored.. aprox 75-100 ga. in a 200 gal. tank... :evilb::cool-smiley-011::rolleyes:
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stable
it is good for 2 years.fill tank up with fresh gas prior to first run of season
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I couldn't get 2 year old fuel to run well in my weed whacker.
Forget about the octane rating after a year. If you're motors are supercharged or high compression you might ant to consider getting rid of all of it. |
Originally Posted by rdoactive
(Post 2358752)
I couldn't get 2 year old fuel to run well in my weed whacker.
Forget about the octane rating after a year. If you're motors are supercharged or high compression you might ant to consider getting rid of all of it. |
Yep,
Stabilizer seems to do a good job at preventing carbs from gumming up. But I dont think it's that great at maintaining octane ratings, preventing fuel breakdown, oxidation, contamination, etc.... what ever happens to old gas. Just my $0.02 Gary
Originally Posted by Scarab3DMC
(Post 2358802)
yes but did you treat your fuel ?
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Originally Posted by rdoactive
(Post 2358863)
Yep,
Stabilizer seems to do a good job at preventing carbs from gumming up. But I dont think it's that great at maintaining octane ratings, preventing fuel breakdown, oxidation, contamination, etc.... what ever happens to old gas. Just my $0.02 Gary You're absolutely right. Pump it onto your car, truck or whatever. Gas is cheap. Motors aren't. Neither are chasing phantom problems and on-water breakdowns. |
I believe the sta-bil bottle says one year. It does not keep fuel from losing octane. I wouldn't chance it and would pump the old fuel out and put it into cars.
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Fuel won't lose octane in a metal tank. The additives that adjust octane and other properties in the gasoline are highly aromatic and will go right through plastic. Got that straight from one of VP's engineers. Gas will last forever in a full, sealed metal container. It's contact with the atmosphere that causes the chemical changes.
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question: how come it wont run right in a boat, but a car will have no problem burning it?
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Originally Posted by Perlmudder
(Post 2359573)
question: how come it wont run right in a boat, but a car will have no problem burning it?
Less compression in the average car engine plus an engine management system to accommodate for lesser fuels. You can usually tell if the fuel has "gone bad" by the way it smells & looks. If it seems odd in any way, you're best off not to even put it into a car. Now you have the problem of what to do with maybe 100 gallons of funky gas. That's a big bonfire. If you can get it into drums, a used oil hauler will take it at no charge. Most likely an oil change shop will too. They can mix it in with their stock tanks and burn it in their used-oil heater or let their pumper take it. Safety Klean will suck it out for you but they'll charge you- not a ton though. |
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