by Mechman » Wed 18 Apr 2007, 01:14:33
jbeckton-Seems odd, just curious.
I will be honored to clarify this mystery because it all does have a very good explanation with more details.
>How do you use 25 gallons of gas a week? I usually did not use 25 gallons a week but the car I drove had a 23 gallon fuel tank and during a normal fill-up I would use about 21 gallons. I would typically fill my tank once every 2 weeks. If I bought 5 of the 5 gallon Jerry cans, I could fully fill my empty tank with a little left over in the 5th can, give it to a friend, help a neighbor, etc. Also during a crisis you actually use more fuel, not less, a nasty paradox (no fuel available and you have to use more to do the same driving tasks). Traffic jams, waiting in line and creeping along kills your fuel efficiency. Just like some of the people that tried to leave Houston, Texas to go to Austin during the hurricane evacuation and they found out after 12 hours of driving (normally the 170 mile trip takes only 2.5 hours), they were out of fuel and they were still not in Austin yet even when some of them started with full tanks and could have gone 400 miles in normal conditions.
>Do you drive a hummer 50 miles to work?
Nope, in 1999 I drove a BMW 735, 17 mpg city, 20 mpg typical, 25 mpg highway at 55mph about 10 miles to work but sometime I would a have to go about 200 miles every 2 weeks on business trips. You might notice from my sig I have been actively changing my ways for the last three years. I now drive a 3 cylinder manual 42 mpg city, 45 mpg typical, 48 mpg highway Geo Metro and use the 23 gallon tanks of my two BMW’s to store fuel along with my 55 gallon drums. If the local Fire Marshal will not let you store a 55 gallon drum of gasoline, get and park a big van, big truck, or use two cars and you can store that much fuel without any fuss. For Y2K, 25 gallons was fine for the risk, PO is huge and the effects long lasting, 25 gallons is not much but a good personal SPR start.
>Why high octane?
Because if there was any leakage, the 93 Octane gasoline might not degrade below the 87 Octane I needed. If you stored 87 Octane gasoline and it degraded to 81 Octane, your engine would probably not like you or the gasoline. If you stored 93 Octane and it degraded to 87 Octane, you would not have a problem. Many of the sources say you cannot store gasoline for very long, months, so if I was concerned about Y2K in July of 1999 I better store fuel in a way that it would still be good on January 1, 2000.
>Also why not use the gas for 6 years? Why didn't you use it when gas was $3.25/gal?
Actually I would still be storing it to continue the experiment today if it was not for a friend in need. My friend needed 4 of my 5 gallon Jerry cans to remove all the fuel from his car fuel tank so he could drop the tank safely for repairs. I used this as a excuse to drain the 6 year old gasoline from the 5 gallon Jerry cans into my BMW to see how it looked and how it worked. Did I have 25 gallons of green Goop? Was general knowledge and Chevron correct, months only, not years? I wanted to know so I stopped the experiment, used the 6 year old fuel which appeared to be in perfect condition and it worked without any problems for the full tank and no problems with future tanks of fuel. This was great! You can store fuel for years instead of months if you use sealed metal containers with preservative and keep them in a cool dry storage area. This gave me the confidence expand into more SPR like storage for longer times.
vision-master-P'boly a commuter that drives a large 4x4. Figure 25 gal would be good for 300 miles max. I used to commute 52 miles a day & that ain't jack. Many sheeple are doing this one-way.
Nope, just a BMW at the time (1999) and now (2007) a Geo Metro that uses the BMW’s, 5 gallon Jerry cans, and 55 gallon drums for external fuel storage. In Texas, if you have a car that gets 20 to 25mpg and you drive from Austin to Dallas, around the city and then back to Austin, you just blew through 20 gallons in a day. 25 gallons in 1999 would typically last about 2 weeks of driving around Austin, Texas. With my Metro and a new job (better pay) with less driving, the 25 gallons now in 2007 typically lasts about 4 to 6 weeks.
jbeckton-Seems like a lot of gas for someone on a PO board. I am by no means a doomer but I conserve as much as possible. I get about 45-50 mpg in my hybrid and only drive 5 miles to work and 5 back, no bike lanes on the bridges and no sidewalks most other places so I can't ride my bike. 25 gallons would last me over 4 months.
>Just a thought, instead of perfecting gas storage that will only last you a week at best, get a different car and store your "emergency gas" in your gas tank.
Absolutely jbeckton, Y2K to PO, BMW’s to Geo Metros, 5 gallon Jerry cans to 55 gallon drums. The threat of PO compared to Y2K is huge and I have seriously been changing everything in my life over the last 3 years. I still have years to go but I am moving as quickly as I can without a full crisis but with the understanding that a full crisis is now probably not avoidable in the next 1, 5 or 10 years. The risks continues to climb and my lifestyle much match the threats the best I can in my circumstances.
Get a “helmet” as soon as you can: financial, fuel storage, vehicle change, housing change, food storage, square foot gardens, permaculture, solar, rain catchment, etc. Personal “Armor” does not stop the attack, it will just hurt less. Preparing for PO will not stop PO or the related problems of PO but it will hurt less. Your actions will minimize the risk to you and yours.
Or you can chose not to change and self-elect to “take one” for the herd when things don’t work out well in the future. In a spiritual way, suffering is good for the soul and it helps one to focus on the blessings of the afterlife. Remember to not store gasoline for more than a few months and only small amounts, use the “Wrong Way“ to justify this general belief so you will not try to store gasoline so you can “take one”. Out of fuel events probably will not be life threatening but it will hurt or at least suck. Remember, you are building up your soul. Or you can do something, spend a little money, time, and effort and make at least a difference in your own life and maybe help someone else too.
Last edited by
Mechman on Thu 19 Apr 2007, 23:23:04, edited 1 time in total.
Mark
Been getting out of the "Beast" for 3 years and counting. Get a helmet as quick as you can.