Sometimes an owner's manual will even tell you not to use junk like that because it can do more harm than good. Snake oil from way back. My new ZTR mower specifically says not to use gasoline additives and the engine book says not to use oil additives.
Anyone using it in gas engines (4 and 2 stroke). Thinking of starting to use in my 'stuff'. Anyone using it? Any opinions?
Stabil and some other good stabilizing antioxidants work for increasing shelf life. I think that Marine Stabil does have extra detergents in it to dissolve crud as well, but I'm not sure about that. But Stabil isn't supposed to increase octane rating, or prevent phase separation. Regardless of marketing claims, the only thing that's really going to prevent phase separation is keeping water out your gas, which you always want to do anyway, ethanol or no ethanol.Stuff has been around for generations. Waaaayyy back. Prob won't do any harm but also isn't necessary for engines built in the last 40 years.
Better off using something like StarTron or the new formula Stabil to stabilize the fuel and prevent it from corroding the inside of the carburetor.
What kind do you use? I think an occasional use of a good detergent additive like Techron which has the same detergents used in "Top Tier" gas like Chevron, Shell, Texaco, and some others, can be good sometimes especially if you need to clean injectors and they're not too far gone. I do quarrel with the separate "fuel dryers", as most of them, like Heet, are just alcohol (methanol) which you certainly don't want any more of in your gas.I run a gas line dryer/fuel injector cleaner 2x a year in my truck
OP can correct me, but I got the impression he was wanting to use it in all his IC engines. A few drops, who cares, and maybe it had a role in applications like the old Atomic 4 marine's mentioned above if used appropriately (it probably did), but my quarrel with most of these additives is the misleading and careless marketing. I still think this particular kind of additive can potentially be harmful because it actually thins the oil down and compromises the very lubricity you need from oil.I used to put a few drop in my old 4 cycle lawn mower that was made back in the leaded gas ages. Not sure it helped but I felt like it did, now I add a few drops of 2 cycle oil.
Not sure the burn temps of MM oil though, some oils can cause a carbon build up if it burns.
Sticking with the 2 cycle oils that are made for 2 cycles is what I go with.
Many hours of development & testing into the formula of the 2 cycle oils.
& it works well or we'd all have broken 2 cycle engines.
Part of the reason for the fuel mix to now be 50:1 VS 40:1 or 30:1 is the new formulated 2 cycle oils are that much better.
(.9 gallons per gallon mix ratio or rinse out the small bottes with gas when mixing to get it all )
I haven't had any issues with 48:1 vs the called for 50:1. But to little oil in the fuel can cause problems.
"Risk Assessment" : is the risk worth it? IMO, No.
My saw cost to much to experiment with the low or no $ cost savings
But if you are going to add it to already mixed gas, are you worried that you mixed in to little oil?
Few drops for piece of mind?
Just wondering your motivation![]()
How large an engine is that? Sounds interesting. How did you acquire such an old gen set with few hours?I have an inline filter that has been cut in half on a band saw to remind me not to use MMO in the fuel. A pink, clogged fuel filter. It took two rounds of changing the filter before I figured out the problem. This was in use on my old (really old) genny power plant. Now I will just use a few drops of two cycle or diesel fuel in it.
Truth be told, I could NOW probably get away with using nothing, but when I first got it, it was basically a new 1942 engine, with little to no hours and would stick the valves. It has a little run time on it now.
How large an engine is that? Sounds interesting. How did you acquire such an old gen set with few hours?
Stabil and some other good stabilizing antioxidants work for increasing shelf life. I think that Marine Stabil does have extra detergents in it to dissolve crud as well, but I'm not sure about that. But Stabil isn't supposed to increase octane rating, or prevent phase separation. Regardless of marketing claims, the only thing that's really going to prevent phase separation is keeping water out your gas, which you always want to do anyway, ethanol or no ethanol.
What kind do you use? I think an occasional use of a good detergent additive like Techron which has the same detergents used in "Top Tier" gas like Chevron, Shell, Texaco, and some others, can be good sometimes especially if you need to clean injectors and they're not too far gone. I do quarrel with the separate "fuel dryers", as most of them, like Heet, are just alcohol (methanol) which you certainly don't want any more of in your gas.
The reason I picked on Heet is it's MSDS here: (broken link removed) Maybe they change formulations now and then. I see that there is one called "IsoHeet" which is isopropanol. Hopefully, that's what you're usingHeet is 99% isopropanol alcohol (not methanol). Methnol treatments are not good in gas becasue methanol reacts with (corrodes) aluminum.
Apparently, it allows a bit more water to be absorbed before separation begins, but that's about it.Q: How does Marine Formula STA-BIL® Ethanol Treatment handle water?
A: Ethanol blended fuels can naturally hold up to 4 tbsp of water per gallon (about 0.5%) before phase separation occurs. Marine Formula STA-BIL® Ethanol Treatment contains a chemical that will absorb an additional fraction of a percent of water above this amount (around 0.2%), by bonding with the water molecules, allowing this additional amount to pass safely through the engine and out through the tailpipe. Any amount above this will drop to the bottom and phase separate. Removing large amounts of water (more than 0.75%) through bonding will cause poor power/acceleration and sometimes cause the engine to quit. Additionally, it can cause catastrophic engine damage. No engine manufacturer recommends removal of these large amounts of water through bonding.
Me too, in spite of my apparent fondness for TechronAnd no, I do not work for or represent any fuel or fuel addative company.
The reason I picked on Heet is it's MSDS here: (broken link removed) Maybe they change formulations now and then. I see that there is one called "IsoHeet" which is isopropanol. Hopefully, that's what you're using![]()
This is from Stabil's website FAQ:
Apparently, it allows a bit more water to be absorbed before separation begins, but that's about it.
my old air cooled VW beetles loved MMO, and its great for unsticking stuck things, but I dont think I'd put it into anything really "modern". I too love the smell of it.
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