Do additives really remove water from fuel, or just disperse throughout the fuel so it can go through the combustion process?
A
small amount of alcohol will bind with water, and be carried through (to burn). With the high amounts of alcohol in gas now, depending on vehicle use/storage/fill practices, the water alcohol mix can stratify - saw some pretty rancid stuff drained out of a Uhaul truck recently.
Startron takes the approach (gas additive at least) to
disperse the water into really tiny particles for combustion. Not my natural first choice, but I didn't get asked about this E## nonsense either ! :thumbdown:
A lot of people get it wrong, but if you can set up a gas engine for deliberate H2O injection successfully, then I guess a few
really tiny drops won't hurt.
For the general market, they have to design an additive with the assumption that a mechanical water separator is
not in place, esp. for gas.
With a mechanical water separator in place, then Stanadyne's strategy to de-emulsify (coagulate) water molecules in diesel makes sense to me.
I've been using Starton (gas addy, aka Smurf pee) for my small motor stuff, like it so far.
Rgds, D.