"Steve W." <csr...@NOTyahoo.com> wrote in message
news:k7bdmm$kvo$1...@dont-email.me...
> Existential Angst wrote:
>> Awl --
>>
>> I recently became aware that fuel injector cleaner is basically
>> kerosene..... !! It's also clear that alcohol is freely mixible in
>> gasoline.
>> In fact,
http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/Monographs/vol45/mono45-8.pdf
>> indicates a wide variety of stuff in gasoline, including aromatics (like
>> benzene). The tables don't seem entirely consistent, but the point is,
>> gas is a bit of a heterogeneous mix.
>>
>> So the Q is: what can one "dump" into one's gastank, and how much,
>> without gumming up the works? Including all these catalytic converters.
>> Mebbe it's better to dump stuff in, say, the lawnmower??
>>
>> And what do I mean by "stuff"?
>> Unknown mixes of 2-stroke gas, kerosene, paint thinner, small amounts of
>> old oil, any combustible really.
>> You can put quite a bit of fuel injector cleaner (kerosene) in a gasoline
>> car, on the order of a pint to just a few gallons of gas, and the car
>> runs fine.
>> But I'm not talking about a deluge of stuff, just a cup here, a cup there
>> in a full-ish tank?
>
> Most cleaners are NOT kerosene. They do contain some light oils to keep
> the stuff freely flowing and lubricate the injectors but most of them are
> simple high detergent items.
Hmmm, you are proly correct about the one I am using (up) now, but I seem to
recall one that was primarily kerosene, altho I wouldn't bet the farm on
that either. Do these kinds of labels adhere to the food label strat, where
ingredients are listed in order?
As far as alcohols, YEP they will mix
> with fuels, however it will separate out if left alone for a while.
> This is especially true of mixed fuels like used in 2 strokes. That is
> also why you should shake the can well before using stored fuels.
>
> If you want to find out how to ruin O2 sensors and converters go for it.
> It doesn't take much oil or other chemicals to screw them up.
Yeah, my conspiratorial li'l mind sees a pattern, where it is hard to
finagle the system, precisely cuz things are now so g-d complex. I'm sure
my Datsun 510 could burn every oz of scrap oil in my shop (in some
dilution).... AND I'm pretty sure it got the mpg's of a Prius....
Even the inverter-as-backup-genset seems a bust, altho I will experiment
more with that, partic to see if 2000-2500 rpm idles are truly nec.
>
> Since you are in the salvage business and probably will have some
> quantities of used oils, mixes and such. Why not at least get some benefit
> from it. Install a waste oil furnace and use the stuff to heat part of
> your building. The one I have will burn pretty much any
> oil/kerosene/diesel/gear oil that you can pump into it. You have to watch
> out for water/antifreeze or other non-combustibles. The easy way is to
> make a separator unit, the one I built is nothing more than two plastic
> drums with 4 different taps. You dump the unknown oil in it and let
> everything settle. Once the stuff has settled into layers it's easy to
> draw off the ones you can use.
Not salvage, shitty li'l machine shop, emphasis on little, next emphasis on
shitty.....
I bought two ventless gas heaters, and pert near asphyxiated on those....
grrrreat heat, but unbreathable air quality.
I could only imagine burning waste oil.
I was hoping that, IF an engine could tolerate kerosene (via fuel injector
cleaners), that it might tolerate other stuff as well. But you are saying
that "if" may be incorrect.
BUT, still and all, if not kerosene, it's burning sumpn ELSE, right? But,
which may have been tested to be OK in engines.... but then mebbe not
either!!
--
EA
>
>
> --
> Steve W.