smokinjay said:
laynes69 said:
I bought a stihl fs55 trimmer 2 years ago and it wouldn't prime this year. Ended up I needed a new carb from stihl and they said 19 out of 20 needed replaced. From what they showed me the fuel was corroding and eating the insides of the carbs. I'm now running a special stabilizer they recommended to try and stop the problems. There's no reason why after 2 years it should have happened. Either it's the fuel or a direct issue that stihl doesn't want to address. Luckily the carb was only 25.00 and now it runs better than when new. Still I wasn't happy. I paid for something I figured wouldn't give me problems and it has been one of biggest pieces I have owned.
Are you leaving fuel in or when storing or not?
No. Something about alcohol and water destroying the interiors...
Interesting you mention continual draining. I have not drained the fuel from anything I can ever think of in recent memory and also have not had any fuel related failure. This is over a whole range of small engines...leaf blower, weed eater, chain saw, lawn mower, wood splitter, jet ski's, etc.
The one thing I can think of which would come close is my 1996 Sea Doo jet ski. For the first couple years after I purchased it, I did the whole winterizing bit, fog engine, drain fuel, remove plugs, etc. In 1998 I moved into a house with a garage which stayed relatively warm, so all I did was fog the engine and put the battery on a tender. This basically continued until last summer, when after 15 years of service and at least 10 years on E10, I rebuilt the carbs on account of the fuel pump reed valves leaking slightly and the pencil-eraser sized internal fuel filters getting clogged with debris. The carbs basically looked fine inside with only the tiniest amount of white powder in some corners of the casting. It brushed away easily with a shot of carb cleaner and a toothbrush...and this is the dreaded 'E10 in a boat'...and a two-stroke at that. I don't really classify this as a failure, and certainly not due to any E10 fuel. I think reed valves are bound to wear out over 1-1/2 decades of service and a fuel filter smaller than a thimble is bound to get clogged over that time period as well.
Don't know if Stihl is cheaping out on the carbs or what. The jet ski appeared to be simple anodized cast aluminum which is not the most expensive material out there. But I would almost wonder if draining the carb allows seals to dry out and moist air to enter more so than just keeping it full of fuel?
smokinjay - I'll post updates of any progress on an E85 saw - success or failure - as long as it's the truth about what happens. I've been looking at an E85 compatible 2-stroke oil for a while now and started browsing craigslist for a moderate-cheap saw and hopefully one which might be easy to bump compression on. Somehow, cutting wood with whiskey just seems 'neat'!