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Peter Dohm wrote:
According to annecdotes that I heard many years ago, service station gas tanks have always contained some water--but since the gasolene is lighter, the water settled to the bottom, so they were able to draw straight gasolene from a floating pickup. According to those annecdotes, there could have been as much as a couple of feet on water below the gasolene before it was drawn of as part of periodic maintenance, with the result that the apparatus were designed to shut off with a considerable level of liquid remaining in the tanks--in order to avoid pumping water. Speaking as someone who pumped gas to earn tuition money back in the early 60s before there was gasahol, we'd 'stick' the tanks daily at closing time to verify the amount in the tanks. There was always some water that was evident at the bottom of the stick, but it was never more than an inch or so. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
How scary is gasohol? | Charles Talleyrand | Owning | 27 | March 1st 04 11:39 AM |