Nov-20-2016 07:52 PM
Nov-21-2016 05:59 PM
Arthur138 wrote:Jim Norman wrote:
If you are doing a conversion to ethanol you will need to do a lot more than just the tank. All the seals and fuel lines can be affected. On top of that Ethanol gives less power per unit and lower MPG. From your second post I am lead to believe that you have done similar on other vehicles so please don't take this wrong. I don't get why you'd want to switch over to Ethanol or even E85. E10 is bad enough!!
EVERYBODY is switching over to ethanol because that is all you can buy at the pumps these days.
And make no mistake about it,even 10 percent ethanol will eat old non-ethanol rated rubber gas lines,and plastic gas filters like acid. There has been people die from rotten gas lines bursting as they were riding down the road at 60 MPH because they were burned to death before they could get their cars stopped.
And you can't replace just the hoses and hope to get away with it. You have to replace it all.
I will even replace the hard lines with the new copper-nickel lines that you can bend by hand without kinking. I do this to prevent rust from developing inside the steel lines and causing carb problems like flooding or backfiring. BTW,in case you don't know,you can buy the copper-nickel lines in any auto parts store in the country. Costs about 25 bucks plus taxes for a 25 foot long roll. Cheap insurance,in MY mind.
Nov-21-2016 04:37 PM
chuckftboy wrote:
You probably would have better luck with having an aluminum tank fabricated since most custom tank shops can manufacture to your old tank specifications making the install much easier using the original mounting and fuel line
locations.
Nov-21-2016 04:35 PM
Jim Norman wrote:
If you are doing a conversion to ethanol you will need to do a lot more than just the tank. All the seals and fuel lines can be affected. On top of that Ethanol gives less power per unit and lower MPG. From your second post I am lead to believe that you have done similar on other vehicles so please don't take this wrong. I don't get why you'd want to switch over to Ethanol or even E85. E10 is bad enough!!
Nov-21-2016 03:35 PM
Nov-21-2016 03:19 PM
Nov-21-2016 03:18 PM
Bill.Satellite wrote:
100 gallons would be on the smallish side for most diesel coaches and not at all unusual on a gas coach. He also mentions a conversion to ethanol which I can't imagine being done on a diesel engine.
I've been wrong before, however!
Nov-21-2016 02:24 PM
Nov-21-2016 02:23 PM
Nov-21-2016 10:34 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
You don't give much information but at 100 gallons, I might guess that it is a diesel engine. I don't know of any gas coaches that had a 100 gallon tank. Not saying there aren't some out there but I have never heard of them. I know you said ethanol use but just checking.
Nov-21-2016 10:33 AM
crasster wrote:
I'd inspect before I replaced, but to each their own. May be a perfectly fine tank. If the tank doesn't have rust and if it were me I'd just siphon the gas, add fresh gas, marvel mystery oil in the gas, and a bit of marvel mystery oil to the oil. May be worth adding a drip of oil down each spark plug hole (when the engine starts it WILL smoke), but this is to lubricate the cylinder a bit.
Nov-21-2016 08:52 AM
Nov-21-2016 08:41 AM
Nov-21-2016 08:08 AM
Nov-20-2016 09:37 PM