[Roadsters] What is in todays fuel that makes everything gum up?

davesmbox at aol.com davesmbox at aol.com
Sun Sep 20 22:30:33 MDT 2009


YOU WANT A LAUGH PLAY WITH TODAYS GAS IN A BOAT'

Dave


-----Original Message-----
From: Scott Ulrich <scott8933 at socal.rr.com>
To: datsun-roadsters: autox.team.net <datsun-roadsters at autox.team.net>
Sent: Sun, Sep 20, 2009 11:40 pm
Subject: Re: [Roadsters] What is in todays fuel that makes everything gum up?




Somewhat off topic I guess, somewhat on. I hate that you can't store
something as simple as a scooter for more than a few months without draining
all the fuel out of it first - otherwise risking an unnecessarily expensive
complete fuel system clean-out.
On the other hand, I remember growing up in Los Angeles as a kid and
sometimes not being able to see the end of the block in the summer from the
smog. People still complain about the air here, who either don't remember
or weren't here to see what Hell on Earth could look like. Sure, its still
bad some days, no question about that. But today's bad is nothing compared
to the leaded-gas days.

Sorry, just waxing anti-nostalgic. Back to the topic at hand.

I think there is something you can put in gas for long-term storage (or what
some people mysteriously call "Winter.") Pretty sure I've read about them on
motorcycle forums. Off to Google it...





>
> David Boerst wrote:
> > I don't call todays fuel gasoline. When I grew up gasoline was
> copper/gold
> in color. The only thing todays fuel has in common with the color is the
> price. My 1600 and Amy's 1966 1600 keep gumming up choke piston wise. Is
> there
> any treatment/additive or polishing of piston to make the choke system stop
> from sticking?
You are subscribed as davesmbox at aol.com

Datsun-roadsters mailing list

http://www.team.net/archive

http://autox.team.net/mailman/listinfo/datsun-roadsters


More information about the Datsun-roadsters mailing list