- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 26,962
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
Maybe it's because you use them regularly. Try letting the corn gas sit in your saw for a few months unused and report back.
Are the examples of the Mac 10-10 not run for several YEARS, and the back-pack blower not run since October reports enough?Maybe it's because you use them regularly. Try letting the corn gas sit in your saw for a few months unused and report back.
It depends on the engine. My saw can sit for 6+ months at a time with fuel in the tank and it always starts right up. Got a couple weed wackers/string trimmers that are a bit fussier about fuel, so I run them dry if they're not going to be used for a while. I only use E10.Maybe it's because you use them regularly. Try letting the corn gas sit in your saw for a few months unused and report back.
No.Are the examples of the Mac 10-10 not run for several YEARS, and the back-pack blower not run since October reports enough?
Jeesh///
thank you so much for your suggestionJust for reference, in the FWIW category, both of my Stihls specify 89 Octane minimum. I would definitely go by what is in your manual.
Higher octane will reduce knock, but it puts more heat into exhaust manifolds and mufflers due to the combustion delay.
I have thought it would be fun to try one of these tuned up, nikasil cylindered, high HP, nitromethane breathing chainsaws. Not enough to build one though...
All the best,
fitness calcualtor
Peter
The reason for ethanol in gasoline is that it is oxygenated fuel reduces tailpipe emissions nitrous oxide (N2O) which is one of the primary ingredients of photochemical smog. They tried MTBE, which turned out to be both persistent and water soluble. They switched to ethanol, which is also water soluble, but almost everything can metabolize it. Other alcohols will work, but they are more expensive to produce.While Henry Ford demonstrated that a Model T could run on ethanol, the politics behind blending ethanol into gasoline has been a mixture; farmers who wanted a bigger market for their corn, environmentalists who wanted a fuel that had lower emissions with less fossil carbon, and others, including some oil companies, and many counties and states who saw an increased tax base. Against that were other farmers who worried about getting enough grain for their animals, environmentalists who were against 'agribusiness', oil companies, car companies, other states who weren't getting a slice of the pie, and the list goes on.