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Fast n Furious wrote:I winterup this way:-
1. Leave the scoot undisturbed for a couple of weeks to let the fuel in the tank settle. Then,
2. look into the tank using a good torch to see if if I can detect any water globbules on the bottom of the tank. E10 absorbs moisure and it's prevalent in the storage tanks at fuel stations. If water is found, I drain the tank and then warm the tank with my portable workshop heater to gently evaporate anything left in the there.
3. If the fuel in the tank looks ok then it just needs protecting from moisure especially if that scoot has to winter in my damp shed.
4. I have a cheap tub of Silica crystals. (This is the stuff that florists use to dry out flowers). I put some in an old sock, weigh it and then hang it inside the filler hole and secure it with the cap making sure the lowest part of the silica sock is an inch or more above the fuel. When I remove it in the spring, I weight it again to see how much moisture has been absorbed!!!. Dry out the crystals in the summer sun and then keep them in an air tight container so they can be used again the following winter.
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