jathomps04
Cadet
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2003
- Messages
- 27
I have a 1981 40HP 2 cylinder Mercury outboard engine. I have no idea what the oil to gas ratio is. Does anyone know? If not, what would be a good ratio to use if I don't know? 50:1?
These questions are made because of curiosity, not argument. Are you saying that regular octane gas from years ago was better than same octane gas today and therefore one should use high octane today when regular would have been fine in an earlier time? I certainly don't disagree that you should burn the octane that your engine's specs call for -if it calls for premium, burn premium or you might have detonation issues. However, if an older engine calls for regular, are you saying that because modern gas isn't as good, you should burn premium?<br /><br />What is meant by "crummy gas"? I've heard it said before, but I really don't understand why the quality would actually be lower today. I just hear it said, but not why it is. I'd say that I'm pretty biased against this general kind of statement because it's said about a lot of stuff that is actually better today than years ago. Cars for instance- they are incredibly better than they were 30 years ago in my personal experience.<br /><br />I've never had a fuel related issue in 30+ years of operating cars, boats, etc. I'm in the high-30s cylinder count including 4 vehicles, two outboards and various small engines. Maybe modern lawnmower, car and outboard engines have been designed to accomodate new-ish "lower quality" fuels, but in my rigs I have a mix of very old (20+ years) and very new no fuel issues with any. Maybe I'm just not perceptive to subtle performance issues, but I certainly don't see shortened lifespan at all. <br /><br />RE: synthetic 2 stroke oil. Is it really better at protecting? I understand that another benefit might be smoother operation and less smoke and smell, but actual measurably better protection than properly mixed TCWIII? And how would this relate to the crummy gas situation? <br /><br />My two outboards are 20+ and 30+ years old and as far as I know have only burned regular gas and non-synthetic TCWIII oil (I take that back - I burned a gallon of full synthetic through them once but didnt' notice any observable difference so I didn't bother buying any more). Both run pretty much perfectly and have good compression.Originally posted by jnewton:<br /> The larger mercs from the 70's and early 80's need to burn premium gas because of today's crummy gas. High probability of burning a piston if you use regular gas. I've heard the smaller mercs have the same tendency. Also use a good quality oil (synthetic) for added protection.