Water in your gas is not normal. I have not even found it common. Pressure wash the bike and you will have problems----not just wet gas but trashed bearings.Souljer wrote:Hi,
Okay, so no doubt this will be a dumb question for some, but if products like Dri-Gas, etc. are alcohol to absorb the water, would it not be easier to simply add some ethanol? E85? Not a fill-up but just some? Last full tank I put in was 91 but I don't know if that has any ethanol or not.
When I drained the carb a few days ago I collected the gas in a metal tray. That's where I noticed the water droplets. I did not look in the float bowl that carefully. Maybe I'll take it apart again in the morning to double check. Then again, is this sort of normal and there are always some drops in the tank? Can you ever get rid of all of it?
I have noticed in a few rides that the carburetor was not leaking (so far) and the engine seemed to run fine ...as long as I remembered to turn the fuel taps back on...
I'll get the hang of this eventually!
That question has come up before and I haven't seen a good answer. The real question is: how much alcohol in the gas is good for dispersing how much water and how well does the resulting mix burn in the engine? As it is it's very hard to avoid gasahol in the US (not E85, just regular gas!)and the stuff has less energy thus makes less power and yields poorer mileage. But it gets pushed due to "emmissions". Actually there is a huge amount of politics and money behind the crap. Big, big money. You can find all sorts of stuff on the web. Follow the money--where does the alcohol come from and who is raking in the cash?
Anyway, Dri-gas is old time stuff--pre-ethanol days, and it is intended for cars where draining a tank is very complex. On the bike, draining the tank is a snap and if you want to get all the water out that is the only way. Gets dirt out too. Most important, you don't want the water coming back. So buy 2 or 3 gallons of gas at your favorite station---but in a clean can. Then look in the bottom of that can. If they are the culprit, you know. Already mentioned never buying when fresh gas is being delivered (tanks get stirred up), from low lying stations, from old stations (leaky tanks) and from first generation immigrants (your own little 2nd or 3rd world gas station).
If you try some chemical solution, like adding more alcohol, you just get poorer burning fuel, even if it works. So what's the point? Get good gas.
I stressed looking for water in the float bowls because you want to see what your engine is seeing. The engine does not see what collects in a tray from both carbs. It sees what is in each bowl. The motor will chew up a certain amount of water (with Bings) just fine. On very high compression motors water is injected to cool the cylinders and control detonation. Stuff just turns to steam---absorbing a LOT of heat. You can also inject water to clean the combustion chambers (know what you are doing!). But from what I have observed, if you have drops the size of a small pea in the bowls, you really feel it when running.
I have cut my reserve standpipes down so I can drawn down my tanks lower. This means I will suck water and dirt that I would not have before. Double edged sword there. I get more range and a more sensitive warning about bad gas but I need to keep the tank really clean if I don't want a nasty surprise when hitting reserve. I may end up not liking it and change it back.
Wipe the filler when buying gas. Gets the germs off from the last guy and the holder on the pump.
Avoid hitting the inside of the tank with the filler, chips the coating on the tank. in Ca I used a yellow plastic filler collar on the clean air pumps. Solved the banging the tank thing. Needs to be kept clean in it's pouch.
Sorry guy, but no excuse for not reading what it says on the pump and knowing what you put in the tank.
I go through spates of forgetting to turn the gas on. It's worrisome. If you want to stay alive on a bike you need your head in the game. What else am I forgetting? Am I sailing through intersections without scanning properly?.