silverclaws
Senior Retro Guru
Am restoring an outboard engine at the moment, an Eaton's Viking made in Southend on Sea and I get from various dates on it, it was built in 1955, it's a two stroke so requires and oil/petrol mix, but at what proportion ?
Way back two strokes ran on various ratios of petrol and oil, I have seen 16:1, 25:1, 32:1 and 40 parts petrol to one part oil, but with those other engines I have been able to find documentation, but this Viking, I am finding nothing about it, yet I know the current mix that is being used is the reason I am repairing the machine, too much oil.
Now I understand since these ancient machines were first designed and used lots has changed, octanes of petrol and performances of oil and I have in the past stuck to the Stihl mix of 50:1 for everything two stroke using Stihl two stroke oil with bog standard supermarket 95 RON and never heard of engines failing, but maybe I just was never told. So what to do about this Viking, I know the reason I am repairing/restoring it is because of too much oil, in that the heavier molecules of oil have blocked the action of the Zenith 13T carb and lowered the octane of the petrol but the question, should old oil mixes be used today, I understand the owner of the machine has been using his standard 20:1, not information from any manual, but what he has always used on the rest of his two cycle machines not as old as this one.
I am thinking modern fuel has got worse, too many not so nice additives in it ethanol and other nasties in some cases and octanes have been lowered, in the case of a two stroke, the adding of oil reduces the octane further, but modern two stroke oil is far better than oil in the 1950's, so is an elder fuel /oil mix really necessary.
What do people think, use a modern mix of say 50:1 using high grade two stroke oil like say Stihl or use a mix from the past with modern ingredients ?.
I understand in marine environments it is common to use 100:1 now because of what water exhausts might be doing to what lives in it.
After I have sorted this Viking, I have a 1950's Clinton and a Seagull of unknown vintage to sort out, this guy likes his old engines.
Way back two strokes ran on various ratios of petrol and oil, I have seen 16:1, 25:1, 32:1 and 40 parts petrol to one part oil, but with those other engines I have been able to find documentation, but this Viking, I am finding nothing about it, yet I know the current mix that is being used is the reason I am repairing the machine, too much oil.
Now I understand since these ancient machines were first designed and used lots has changed, octanes of petrol and performances of oil and I have in the past stuck to the Stihl mix of 50:1 for everything two stroke using Stihl two stroke oil with bog standard supermarket 95 RON and never heard of engines failing, but maybe I just was never told. So what to do about this Viking, I know the reason I am repairing/restoring it is because of too much oil, in that the heavier molecules of oil have blocked the action of the Zenith 13T carb and lowered the octane of the petrol but the question, should old oil mixes be used today, I understand the owner of the machine has been using his standard 20:1, not information from any manual, but what he has always used on the rest of his two cycle machines not as old as this one.
I am thinking modern fuel has got worse, too many not so nice additives in it ethanol and other nasties in some cases and octanes have been lowered, in the case of a two stroke, the adding of oil reduces the octane further, but modern two stroke oil is far better than oil in the 1950's, so is an elder fuel /oil mix really necessary.
What do people think, use a modern mix of say 50:1 using high grade two stroke oil like say Stihl or use a mix from the past with modern ingredients ?.
I understand in marine environments it is common to use 100:1 now because of what water exhausts might be doing to what lives in it.
After I have sorted this Viking, I have a 1950's Clinton and a Seagull of unknown vintage to sort out, this guy likes his old engines.