MajBach
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2003
- Messages
- 564
Re: 2stroke motors instalment 1
I have heard/experienced this... to some degree.<br />About 15 or so years ago, Bardahl (I think owned by bombardier now) had a concentrated 2-stroke snowmobile oil. It was expensive but we used it on our new sleds for several weeks one winter. One day, we were out on the trails and two of the sleds' engine seized - within a few feet of each other! Both sleds had side mounted cooling fans and it was the outboard piston that had the trouble. The sled that survived had a center mounted fan. <br />Anyway, one of the guys owned a small engine shop and had determined (not entirely on his own) that the oil had congealed out of the pre-mix gas. This event BTW, happened after cold snap. He took his evidence and reports to the oil mfg. and surprisingly, the Bardahl paid the bills. Shortly after that, we noticed the oil no longer offered on the shelves and not long after that, there was a replacememt oil. The new oil was the same price but the quantity was a little over double from the previous can. However, one can still treated the same amount of fuel. <br />The verdict (from the oil mfg.) was that the oil did indeed not tolerate the cooler temperatures.<br />I know oil has come a long way in 20 years but ever since then, if I have pre mixed fuel lying around and it gets cold outside, I use the fuel for starting fires rather than running engines.i have never heard of this before! and if it were true for premix, it would be more true for a vro system that is stored outside in the freezing temps. this really bothers me because i dont believe it! but after reading this i'm not going to risk it either. if anyone can validate this claim please step forward. i'm kinda freakin out now!<br />