grsthegreat
Super Star Member
If your in the bay area…..soon you may not have gas stations.
Brother bought several cheap carbs and so far did the trick.Since switching to ethanol free gas on all my equipment except for vehicles, i used to say ive never had any more issues with small equipment.
i cant say that any longer. One of my 10 yo stihl string trimmers has bit the dust. Its something in the carb. Its a simple device which i tried removing and cleaning, but to no avail. It fires right up first pull, than slowly dies. The other trimmer fires first pull and works like a charm. I checked everything, was running great the day before on fresh fuel. Fuel filter spotless.
but ill set this carb aside and try one of the chinese knock off carbs when it arrives next week. Thry want $70 for oem replacement, carb only.
for $18 i got a knockoff that comes with fuel lines, fuel bulb, oil filter, air filter and prefilter. So creap its worth the try. I put one of these in my old mantis thinking it would get me thru the growing season until i could rebuild the old unit. That was 5-6 years ago and still working great.
i guess those technology thieves know a thing or 2 about reverse engineering…..
Thanks for the correction. Farm relatives (mine) are either retired, or dead, so I appear to be out of touch with the economics.... not that I (ever) viewed farming as an easy way to get rich. Leaves the question - why grow corn then, if at a loss ? - but likely best left for another thread/site.....Farmers are certainly NOT getting rich off of ethanol enriched fuels.
What I have found interesting over many years is that two stroke engines running on 50-1 oils seem to have less carb problems with old gas then any 4 stroke engines with any combination of witches brew in the fuel. Fortunately I can get ethanol free gas from many stations around here it is expensive close to a buck a gallon higher and it is supposed to be high octane. I use very little 2 storke fuel so it's not a killer to fill up a can with the non ethanol gas a couple of times a year. I do dump at least one of those tiny bottles of 50 - 1 bottles of oil in a five gallon can of gas regardless of what it's going to be used in.
My least started engine the last couple of years has been my sanders Brigs and Stratton which only got started once last season and that was just a check run as I never had to sand the driveway last winter. It started right up with the fuel that had been in it since the winter before.
Vancouver proper has no gas-stations left, if I'm recalling a news item correctly. It's been a lot of years since I was in Van, but there weren't many then.I think building a new gas station is no longer allowed here.
Many street corners I remember having stations are empty lots now.
I would not be surprised if only a third of the stations from growing up around here still exist…
That white-bloom is a common problem.Interesting you mention that about volatility. I bought an old forklift last winter and it had a full tank of gas in it about 4 years old.. Carb was plugged with white corrosion bloom and the mechanical fuel pump was solid. I got the carb cleaned out and the thing actually ran quite well (well, idled... I have no idea the % power output) but I put a little of that gas on the concrete and tossed a match on it and it wouldn't even burn.
It's the soft-parts they often cut corners on. Talking with an old college buddy about 10 years back, he had been researching PRC made tractors etc.... first recommendation was to throw away all the O-rings that came on them, and replace with good quality ones.They usually provide several of the green fuel hoses with each carb and they don't seem to make it through a single season. I am likely going to bite the bullet and buy the OEM for the next replacement and see how that lasts... the original lasted about 4 years it seems to me.