Lead Additive?

turtle1173

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Nov 29, 2001
Messages
437
I was told that older engines were originally made to run on Leaded fuel, therefore a lead additive is a good idea. Does anyone have any advice/ experience with this? Is Unleaded harder on the engine or anything?<br /><br />Thanks,<br /><br />Shane
 

Case

Cadet
Joined
Nov 17, 2001
Messages
25
Re: Lead Additive?

Lead (specifically tetraethyl lead) as a fuel additive provides two fundamental benefits. It slows the burn rate of the fuel, causing combustion to be less hot. The second benefit is its complex chemical reactions that provide specific 4 cycle engine performance improvements that are not specifically heat related, but affect lubrication and gas transfer.<br /><br />Basic information - the lower the octane, the faster (and hotter) the fuel burns. Airplanes are air cooled, so they run 100 and 130 octane fuels for temperture control. <br /><br />If your asking should you run an additive, my recommendation would be no. Just run premium fuel and occasionally run the decarbonizer from Evenrude or Mercury (both get high marks on this board, and there are guys who routinely post that definitely know what they are talking about).<br /><br />I suspect that there will be others who disagree.<br /><br />Case<br /><br />Women love me, fish fear me! :p
 

petryshyn

Commander
Joined
Oct 3, 2001
Messages
2,851
Re: Lead Additive?

Although lead was added in to slow combustion, one major benefit was the residue it left on engine parts. The residue accumulates on the valve and valve seat and cushions the slamming that occurs. Take away the lead and hammer out the soft valve seats. Other additives are now used that supposedly do a similiar function, though not as good. In old engines, stellite valve seats are the answer.....In 2-strokes, nothing to worry about....
 

clanton

Rear Admiral
Joined
Jul 9, 2001
Messages
4,876
Re: Lead Additive?

If it is an OMC product I have a chart for retard timing specs, and recommended fuel octane.
 

turtle1173

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Nov 29, 2001
Messages
437
Re: Lead Additive?

I guess I should of mentioned that I have a 1975 55HP Chrysler.<br /><br /> So, Schematic, would you recommend using the lead additive?<br /><br />Shane
 

Fouled Plug

Ensign
Joined
Jun 29, 2001
Messages
935
Re: Lead Additive?

Turtle, 87 octane unleaded and a quality 2 stroke oil will keep you running just fine. Your motor has no valves, so no lead necessary. Keep the fuel fresh and don't sweat it. Save the lead additive for the '55 DeSoto :D
 

turtle1173

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Nov 29, 2001
Messages
437
Re: Lead Additive?

Thanks Fouled Plug (and everyone else). I'm just trying to cover all my bases :D <br /><br />Shane
 
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