New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
I do not want to be snarky. I always wondered what it meant for gas to be "too old". I do not think 6 months or even a year is too old assuming the gas is not picking up condensation. Surly there must be a standard for "too old gas". And for that matter oil. Modern oils are so stabile that they can sit in the garage forever but put it in an engine and then the timer starts. What does Guzziland think? And really Seamaster I am not challenging you, I just thought this would be a good question to ask cause I have always wondered what the answer is.
Ok, this probably is a dead horse, but I researched the Internet, there is still no defiant answer to this. I am living in West Washington State, where are the good places to get ethanol free gas? How reliable is pure-gas.org? I notice the gas station that listed on the pure-gas.org near my house does not have much traffic, i mean there are not many people buy gas over there, their gas may be really old. Is Shell V-Power premium is still ethanol free? Thanks for the help.
For older bikes, a reasonable (though illegal) alternative is aviation gas, the 100LL variety. LL is low lead, so this is verboten in bikes with emissions equipment. Also illegal because you don't pay road taxes on it. Nonetheless very expensive -- around here $4 a gallon. But if the goal is zero ethanol, this is where you're guaranteed to find it.
So I'm out in the middle of bum-$#@& North Carolina...
I'm waiting for NJ to outlaw farts because they pollute and contribute to global warming.
Actually, the science says cow farts are a measurable problem - so if you weigh what a cow does and eat what a cow eats, you are contributing to climate change! Maybe this is why Chris Christie lost weight?
I just found an ethanol free gas station that offers racing gasoline VP 108 at the pump for $10/gallon. For New England prices that's good, but I think this is leaded, so that's another issue.I'm talking about Columbus Energies in Swansea, MA; http://columbusenergies.com/
Guess they are near enough to Seekonk Speedway that they have the customers for that product.
Many small planes can be recertified to run on hi-octane auto fuel ("mogas"), but not my Piper Comanche. Piper and the FAA were explicit that ethanol would damage the rubber bits in the fuel system, and since the fuel tanks were rubber bladders stuffed into the wings . . .So I'm not at all surprised to hear that ethanol will cause rubber hoses, o-rings, gaskets and the like to soften or swell.