In our region crushers virtually never work in the winter, they are an April till October work season, park everything and take the winters off.they have no issues whatsoever in the big diesel engines that power their gen sets or equipment. I'm not sure what gravel crushers you have experience with, but these guys do not sit anywhere for any length of time other than what it takes to move them to the next pit. they go 24/7, 365. every plant gets a 2 week "turnaround" in the summer for critical component maintenance that can't be done in the field.
X2. When I worked for OK Ag. that was the norm. Shut down in Nov, fire up in April.In our region crushers virtually never work in the winter, they are an April till October work season, park everything and take the winters off.
there are at least 5 plants with this one outfit currently working in the Ft Mac area crushing gravel for the twinning of 63. the gravel is getting hard to find up there, and winter roads have to be built on muskeg to get to some of the spots. they crush all winter and new Canadians ferry the gravel out to pads accessible during summer months.In our region crushers virtually never work in the winter, they are an April till October work season, park everything and take the winters off.
Lol new Canadians.there are at least 5 plants with this one outfit currently working in the Ft Mac area crushing gravel for the twinning of 63. the gravel is getting hard to find up there, and winter roads have to be built on muskeg to get to some of the spots. they crush all winter and new Canadians ferry the gravel out to pads accessible during summer months.
Lol new Canadians.
I read Bill Gate's will give me $250 for forwarding his email.
I have a new esso bulk station near me they offer dyed premium 93 octane ,
some say the dye is bad for injectors ?
Mmmmm...........
what micron raycor?
Use seafoam , keeps gas good all summer... Both sleds ran 100% with just a fill up tank and goIt is highly unlikely that the dye in the fuel is a problem but it could be an additional problem in old fuel but not the main one. The big issue is the presence of ethanol which deteriorates faster than the actual gasoline and attracts/absorbs moisture. I think the best approach is to buy ethanol free premium for as long as it is available.
By the way, Esso, Husky and Petro Canada all have ethanol in their premium fuels (according to their websites anyway).
Shell and Co-op/Tempo do not (again according to their website).
Some superstore premiums do not - check the pump.
I think they are all a little suspect because fuel can sometimes be delivered on a first available delivery basis and sometimes the refiners will trade fuel. Many of the delivery trucks are independent as well so the chain of custody is often not perfect.
I prefer using Shell in my Summit 800 but have used Superstore. No Co-op in my areas but there is a Tempo.
I had used a fuel stabilizer in my fuel last year but the fuel was still crap in the fall. Engine ran poorly enough that I brought it back to the dealer for a check and the diagnosis was poor fuel. My approach now is drain as much out as I can (I bought a mechanical siphon) and put in a fresh 3 liters of premium with added stabilizer and run it for about 5 minutes. This December, I topped off the tank with fresh premium and it ran great.
Don't worry about the dye. Just make sure you have fresh fuel.
Not to derail the thread ,but i'm amazed at the zero bitching I have came across about the lack
of fuel(regular and premium) that is available to the general public for off-road use.
Kinda pizzes me off paying 18 ish cent's per litre road maint.tax for fuel for sled's and quad's. I was
actually going to say that in the trail pass thread but forgot.
AND GO.........................