Typically I will test a float for two days in gas to see if it is a leaker. I do this outside of course. Sometimes I test them in a glass coffee pot, etc.
Now for the problem at hand. I tested a spotless brass float in ethanol for 4 days. This ethanol was just bought by my son for the power mower at our local serice station. I suspect it's 87 octane.
I was shocked to see that the float had turned filthy black. Black and other colors none of which resemble brass. Appears that the wonderful ethanol is also attacking the brass floats big time.
Very upsetting so it is. Now this problem isn't just the fuel injections. It has to be happening to the carburetors also. Will the blackening hurt the float? The answer is YES.
Sometimes it takes a while for me to catch on to the problem. I have been wondering why so many of the floats appear to have been put in some kind of acid. Now I know the answer to the etching of the float is ethanol.
Now for the problem at hand. I tested a spotless brass float in ethanol for 4 days. This ethanol was just bought by my son for the power mower at our local serice station. I suspect it's 87 octane.
I was shocked to see that the float had turned filthy black. Black and other colors none of which resemble brass. Appears that the wonderful ethanol is also attacking the brass floats big time.
Very upsetting so it is. Now this problem isn't just the fuel injections. It has to be happening to the carburetors also. Will the blackening hurt the float? The answer is YES.
Sometimes it takes a while for me to catch on to the problem. I have been wondering why so many of the floats appear to have been put in some kind of acid. Now I know the answer to the etching of the float is ethanol.

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