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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

A couple days ago, it snowed. I went to go start
my Dad's (RIP) snow blower. Ran for half second,
and would not start. The gas in the fuel tank is
a bit milky looking. And the gas plastic (I
refuse to call it a gas CAN as it's not metal)
might have water, not sure.

The gas plastic, the spout has a snap on cap, but
it was not capped. Stored in the garage, so rain
isn't issue. Does the new gasohol suck humidity
out of the air?

I know I need to drain the gasoline, and go buy
new gas. What to do with the old gasoline?

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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

yep water in gas, the alochol in gasoline sucks up moisture....

dump old gas out, and move on. for 2 cycle engines stores sell alcohol free gas in cans
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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 10:31 AM, bob haller wrote:
yep water in gas, the alochol in gasoline sucks up moisture....

dump old gas out, and move on. for 2 cycle engines stores sell alcohol free gas in cans

A friend of mine has outdoor fires, once in a
while. He's agreed to dispose safely, the old
gas. Now to get permission from Mom, and go
there and drain the snow blower. It's tank
on top, so I'd have to remove the fuel line,
drain the tank. Remove the bowl, drain the
carb. Station about five miles away sells
alcohol free high octane. Buy some gas.

Sounds like a plan. Thanks.

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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 10:06 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
A couple days ago, it snowed. I went to go start
my Dad's (RIP) snow blower. Ran for half second,
and would not start. The gas in the fuel tank is
a bit milky looking. And the gas plastic (I
refuse to call it a gas CAN as it's not metal)
might have water, not sure.

The gas plastic, the spout has a snap on cap, but
it was not capped. Stored in the garage, so rain
isn't issue. Does the new gasohol suck humidity
out of the air?

I know I need to drain the gasoline, and go buy
new gas. What to do with the old gasoline?

Pour it on the ground (that's where it came from)
Use it to start something on fire. (bon fire)
Mix it slowly with good gas. Put a little of it in you car gas tank.
nuf said

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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 10:34 AM, Chuck wrote:

I know I need to drain the gasoline, and go buy
new gas. What to do with the old gasoline?

Pour it on the ground (that's where it came from)
Use it to start something on fire. (bon fire)
Mix it slowly with good gas. Put a little of it in you car gas tank.
nuf said


I did the gas on the ground thing, while working
on a lawn mower. The grass didn't grow back for a
couple years. Bonfire is more my style. Break it
down to carbon dioxide and water vapor, and let the
ecosystem recycle it.

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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 09:34 AM, Chuck wrote:
On 12/18/2013 10:06 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
A couple days ago, it snowed. I went to go start
my Dad's (RIP) snow blower. Ran for half second,
and would not start. The gas in the fuel tank is
a bit milky looking. And the gas plastic (I
refuse to call it a gas CAN as it's not metal)
might have water, not sure.

The gas plastic, the spout has a snap on cap, but
it was not capped. Stored in the garage, so rain
isn't issue. Does the new gasohol suck humidity
out of the air?

I know I need to drain the gasoline, and go buy
new gas. What to do with the old gasoline?

Pour it on the ground (that's where it came from)
Use it to start something on fire. (bon fire)
Mix it slowly with good gas. Put a little of it in you car gas tank.
nuf said

\




No...do not pour it on the ground or put it in your gas tank.

The fire-starter suggestion is ok

or

Get a box of kitty litter and pour it in there to allow it to harmlessly
evaporate.

Best to turn it in to your towns hazardous chemical disposal if your
town has one.

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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 10:45 AM, philo wrote:
No...do not pour it on the ground or put it in your gas tank.

The fire-starter suggestion is ok

or

Get a box of kitty litter and pour it in there to allow it to harmlessly
evaporate.

Best to turn it in to your towns hazardous chemical disposal if your
town has one.


Wonder if any of the nearby FD would take it
for use in their fire drills? A friend of
mine has a burn pile out back, he can use it
as fire lighter.

Dad's got three gas cans. I'd bet all three are
full of water. Sigh.

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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 9:51 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
On 12/18/2013 10:45 AM, philo wrote:
No...do not pour it on the ground or put it in your gas tank.

The fire-starter suggestion is ok

or

Get a box of kitty litter and pour it in there to allow it to harmlessly
evaporate.

Best to turn it in to your towns hazardous chemical disposal if your
town has one.


Wonder if any of the nearby FD would take it
for use in their fire drills? A friend of
mine has a burn pile out back, he can use it
as fire lighter.

Dad's got three gas cans. I'd bet all three are
full of water. Sigh.


One could try some gas stabilizer and mix old gasoline with fresh
gasoline. 25/75 old to new. Drain blower tank into suitable
container and re-purpose, or filter and put back into old storage
container.

I would mix with enough powdered Tide, or similar, and make some
gooey flammable stuff to have fun with.

In the future, find a fuel source that does not have methanol or
similar grain alcohol. That crap is a joke.


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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 11:37 AM, Irreverent Maximus wrote:

One could try some gas stabilizer and mix old gasoline with fresh
gasoline. 25/75 old to new. Drain blower tank into suitable
container and re-purpose, or filter and put back into old storage
container.

I would mix with enough powdered Tide, or similar, and make some
gooey flammable stuff to have fun with.

In the future, find a fuel source that does not have methanol or
similar grain alcohol. That crap is a joke.


Ah, the old gooey flammable stuff. Send it to
Ireland, for their outdoor sports?

Just called Mom, asked is this a good time to come
fix Dad's snow blower. No, she got the snow plow
guy to do the walks also, and the snow blower is
no longer needed. I spent a bunch of time working
on preps, tools, planning. And one more ## thing got
cancelled out from under me. I'm not ammused.

Don't tell her I said that.


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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On Wednesday, December 18, 2013 7:34:59 AM UTC-8, Chuck wrote:
On 12/18/2013 10:06 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:

A couple days ago, it snowed. I went to go start


my Dad's (RIP) snow blower. Ran for half second,


and would not start. The gas in the fuel tank is


a bit milky looking. And the gas plastic (I


refuse to call it a gas CAN as it's not metal)


might have water, not sure.




The gas plastic, the spout has a snap on cap, but


it was not capped. Stored in the garage, so rain


isn't issue. Does the new gasohol suck humidity


out of the air?




I know I need to drain the gasoline, and go buy


new gas. What to do with the old gasoline?




Pour it on the ground (that's where it came from)

Use it to start something on fire. (bon fire)

Mix it slowly with good gas. Put a little of it in you car gas tank.

nuf said



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Or let it set out on a cold, cold night. Next day put the gas in the truck and and dump out the ice . That's what I did when I picked up the can one day and heard "rattle".

Harry K


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Default Gas plastic, got water in it

On 12/18/2013 4:44 PM, Harry K wrote:

Or let it set out on a cold, cold night. Next day put the gas in the truck and and dump out the ice . That's what I did when I picked up the can one day and heard "rattle".

Harry K

Never heard that one, but it makes sense.

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