View Single Post
Old 02-12-2019, 08:25 PM   #8 (permalink)
crazy4oldcars
Enthusiast Member
 
crazy4oldcars's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: SE Texas
Posts: 448
Drives: '16 Nismo Tech
Rep Power: 28412
crazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond reputecrazy4oldcars has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Water settles to the bottom of the tank. The fuel pickup is on the bottom, too.
If you haven't had an issue by now, you probably got away with it. As previously stated, adding alcohol will absorb the water, and mix with the gasoline.
Your local hardware store will have pure methanol, in half-gallon containers. It's used in varnishing furniture. That should be enough to treat 4 or 5 tanks of gas.


Kirk B.
crazy4oldcars is offline   Reply With Quote