JDgreen227
Super Member
Last fall I filled several five gallon cans with fresh fuel to keep for winter use in my snowblowers, etc. I also put two gallons into a smaller can and mixed oil into it for a 40/1 ratio that I used in my smaller blower and chain saw during the winter. Last week I tried using the remaining 30 ounces of 2-stroke mix in my weedeater. It would not run properly so I drained the fuel in the tank and can into a clear glass container, then let it settle.
I measured an actual 5 ounces of water in the 30 ounces of mix and the color before it separated was a pale green. Because the fuel was fresh and I had been buying gasoline from the same station for 15 years with no problems, I didn't add stabilizer to the fuel. The unused five gallon can of straight gasoline had about 10 ounces of water inside it. I've never had a condensation problem with stored fuel before and I'm wondering if storing the cans (plastic) on a bare concrete floor in an unheated building could have caused that much condensation. Any comments? Thanks.
I measured an actual 5 ounces of water in the 30 ounces of mix and the color before it separated was a pale green. Because the fuel was fresh and I had been buying gasoline from the same station for 15 years with no problems, I didn't add stabilizer to the fuel. The unused five gallon can of straight gasoline had about 10 ounces of water inside it. I've never had a condensation problem with stored fuel before and I'm wondering if storing the cans (plastic) on a bare concrete floor in an unheated building could have caused that much condensation. Any comments? Thanks.