lustyd
Well-Known Member
A simple apology, or even a grown up acknowledgment that what I said wasn’t wrong and it’s over. He started this by being an arse and arguing against basic science.Get a room you two FFS!
A simple apology, or even a grown up acknowledgment that what I said wasn’t wrong and it’s over. He started this by being an arse and arguing against basic science.Get a room you two FFS!
Your usual nonsense...A simple apology, or even a grown up acknowledgment that what I said wasn’t wrong and it’s over. He started this by being an arse and arguing against basic science.
A simple apology, or even a grown up acknowledgment that what I said wasn’t wrong and it’s over. He started this by being an arse and arguing against basic science.
Oh my. Is'nt this a wonderful niggly thread. Really lightens the evening up to read this sort of stuff. I like the fisherman, but nobody else seems to have commented on him.
Maybe it is thread drift, but I have to add my tuppence worth of niggle in response to Ash 2020's belief that red diesel in UK was subsidised. My memory of the distant past leads me to believe that it was not, in spite of the story promoted by some in order to justify an increase in indirect taxation.
Instead, I believe fuel for road vehicles used to carry a financial surcharge, intended to offset the cost of repairing roads. I think that may have been called “road fuel excise duty” way back in the days when garages had fuel pumps labelled “derv”.
At some time, maybe in the seventies or eighties, a former government decided to simplify the taxation system, and changed the excise duty surcharge into a higher rate of VAT on road vehicle fuel compared to other fuels.
I am open to correction on this if anyone has proof to the contrary, but I believe road fuel carried a financial surcharge, rather than red diesel being subsidised. So now we all pay road tax on off-road fuel.
Attention seekers Refueler, ignore them.
Following your usual trend, belittling, insulting....They’re your words, I’m not twisting them I’m quoting them. Each time you respond like an angry toddler stamping his feet with his fingers in his ears. Not once have you replied with any substance.
So no apology then, I guess since you clearly don’t understand what you’ve been saying. Hopefully the nurse will be back soon.
Umhh? This is entirely contrary to my experience. I don't see any way of excluding the evaporation of fuel in the bowl over a period of time, unless one actually hermatically sealed the carburettor. It's designed to allow the transit of air through 2 apertures, and the carb bowl will always be open to the atmosphere through the needle valve opening, unless one primes the motor to close the needle valve, after having stopped it?No sensible reason to drain a 4 stroke carb as it makes corrosion worse by letting air and water in. Carbs, as almost all metals, can and do corrode and if you find white powder inside this is the likely reason. It can take as little as a couple of weeks.
Umhh? This is entirely contrary to my experience. I don't see any way of excluding the evaporation of fuel in the bowl over a period of time, unless one actually hermatically sealed the carburettor. It's designed to allow the transit of air through 2 apertures, and the carb bowl will always be open to the atmosphere through the needle valve opening, unless one primes the motor to close the needle valve, after having stopped it?
Is that the correct procedure?
Draining the carburettor will remove the water content present in the E10/E5 fuels, as there's none of that remaining; it's been removed. The air is at no greater a concentration than with the carb filled to the point where the needle valve operates, or when it's drained. What has happened though, is that the liquid carrying the 'stuff' that blocks the jet has been removed, along with the problem of stale fuel in the carb.
I've never seen corrosion on the inside of a carburettor, nor on the outside of a properly maintained unit actually.....
I've 3 outboards; Honda 2.3, Tohatsu 3.5 (2T) and a Tohatsu 6hp which all require the carb to be emptied.
I've no doubt that lustyd is sincere in his assertion that his outboards are better for having the fuel left in.
Good effort, way to regain credibility.OOP'S ... that you of his Xmas Card list !!![]()
Yes, the key there is over time. If you’re laying it up then it might make sense, but for a week it would do way more harm than good.don't see any way of excluding the evaporation of fuel in the bowl over a period of time
Good effort, way to regain credibility.![]()