Grumpycat
Super Member
Ethanol ruins rubber components, that's why all small engines (weed eaters, chainsaws and the such quit after a year ) the reason is, it makes the diaphragms hard and they wont pump fuel anymore making them hard to start or not start at all. I buy cheap or get free non running or hard to start tools like these then run to the local parts supplier to get a handful of diaphragms, repair them and sell as a hobby. I use ethanol free gas in mine, since you cant find it at most stations I buy the cans of premix at the hardware stores or mower dealers. I run regular pump gas in my 4 cycles with no issues using nitryl or pvc vinyl hoses for fuel lines.
Small engine makers have known for 15 years or more that they had to design for ethanol. Only poorly selected components have any issue with ethanol.
Small engines have a big problem with water. Simple gas tanks with easy vent, no sealed tank with charcoal canister as found on automobiles and trucks. Pure gasoline will hold less than 0.1% water but E10 will hold a lot. This water in solution is nasty to diecast zinc and brass. And to rubber products that are not formulated to be water safe.
And finally, it took longer than it should have for premix oil to be ethanol-compatible. If your premix is not rated for ethanol then there is a large chance the ethanol will decompose the oil. Use it quick and you'll be OK, but a week or month for now is anyone's guess.
Ethanol-free is very hard to find around here. Easier to find at marinas and gas stations serving the boating community. But commonly $1.00/gallon extra.
I hate that ethanol is forced on us by government. If it is all that great then let the free market decide. I don't believe ethanol is doing any good, that it consumes more resources than it saves. The Almighty Dollar is the only honest metric of resource consumption. No man will willingly work for less than his worth or sell his resources for less than he can get elsewhere. So if ethanol was consuming less resources than gasoline then ethanol would cost less than gasoline and the world would demand more ethanol. But when government has to force the issue in ethanol's favor, then it is not anything but government pork for favored parties.