Nope I've not eaten too much chilli....
No I don't want to make this all political.
What I want to know is, how the heck do you folks keep ethanol (which is what I presume is causing my problems, as I've been told this by now 3 outboard repair shops), from destroying your outboard...
I've now had 3 different outboards suffer from carb bowl lacquering. Of course a rebuild puts them back on top again (yeah I know I should learn to rebuild them myself)...
The solutions I've gotten to prevent this before was to "always run out your fuel." Which I do. And to "always use fresh fuel." Which I do, and I have several 2 cycle (which all these outboards have been) motors that all require 50:1 to my weed eater, my chainsaw and my leaf blower all use the same fuel, and I rarely go more than 3 or 4 weeks all summer long with my mix. I'd figure that was a pretty good turnover.
I've had it suggested to me that 92 octane is "better"
I've had someone suggest I use jet fuel? REALLY?
My life experience tells me that most of these motors want lower octane not higher, but I could be wrong.
The ONLY thing that has made sense to me (if the ethanol is truly what is causing this) is the suggestion someone made that I use "Truefuel," which is a pre-mixed long shelf life 50:1 fuel. See it here: http://www.trufuel50.com/ProductInfo.aspx
The GOOD news is that it's readily available from the local hardware stores. The Bad news is, it's $8 a QUART! Granted my little 3.5hp motor only uses 1 liter at a time, but I always carry a 2 gallon jerry can with me (usually only with 1 gallon in it, as I like to use UP my fuel)... so that's a pretty expensive Jerry can of fuel!
Before you POO POO a $32 a gallon can of fuel, lemme tell you paying SOMEONE else to rebuild my carbs (and retune) runs into about $300 each time, and I usually get about 1 year (2 seasons) out of my motor before I wind up back in the shop.
I really don't use my motor that much but when I do, I usually run it 1/2 to 3/4 throttle for 20-30 minutes at a pop. I also run the motor about a half dozen times a month until it's dry. IF I use more than say 4 gallons all season that'd be a lot.
Thoughts?
No I don't want to make this all political.
What I want to know is, how the heck do you folks keep ethanol (which is what I presume is causing my problems, as I've been told this by now 3 outboard repair shops), from destroying your outboard...
I've now had 3 different outboards suffer from carb bowl lacquering. Of course a rebuild puts them back on top again (yeah I know I should learn to rebuild them myself)...
The solutions I've gotten to prevent this before was to "always run out your fuel." Which I do. And to "always use fresh fuel." Which I do, and I have several 2 cycle (which all these outboards have been) motors that all require 50:1 to my weed eater, my chainsaw and my leaf blower all use the same fuel, and I rarely go more than 3 or 4 weeks all summer long with my mix. I'd figure that was a pretty good turnover.
I've had it suggested to me that 92 octane is "better"
I've had someone suggest I use jet fuel? REALLY?
My life experience tells me that most of these motors want lower octane not higher, but I could be wrong.
The ONLY thing that has made sense to me (if the ethanol is truly what is causing this) is the suggestion someone made that I use "Truefuel," which is a pre-mixed long shelf life 50:1 fuel. See it here: http://www.trufuel50.com/ProductInfo.aspx
The GOOD news is that it's readily available from the local hardware stores. The Bad news is, it's $8 a QUART! Granted my little 3.5hp motor only uses 1 liter at a time, but I always carry a 2 gallon jerry can with me (usually only with 1 gallon in it, as I like to use UP my fuel)... so that's a pretty expensive Jerry can of fuel!
Before you POO POO a $32 a gallon can of fuel, lemme tell you paying SOMEONE else to rebuild my carbs (and retune) runs into about $300 each time, and I usually get about 1 year (2 seasons) out of my motor before I wind up back in the shop.
I really don't use my motor that much but when I do, I usually run it 1/2 to 3/4 throttle for 20-30 minutes at a pop. I also run the motor about a half dozen times a month until it's dry. IF I use more than say 4 gallons all season that'd be a lot.
Thoughts?