Hi,
I have a 1998 grand prix GT and it says I have a 18gallon gas tank but whenever I run my gas tank to almost empty the most I ever fill up is around 13? Where is the other 5 gallons?
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Hi,
I have a 1998 grand prix GT and it says I have a 18gallon gas tank but whenever I run my gas tank to almost empty the most I ever fill up is around 13? Where is the other 5 gallons?
when you hit dead E you still have 3 gallons, thats why. this car is designed to make you not run out of gas but sadly i have done it three times lol
and trust me, it will suck every last drop out too
lol alright i figured it was made to make sure you dont run out of gas just kind've sucks i would like to be able to run it down all the way just hard to tell when it says you are empty when you really arent.
Well you shouldn't run it down all the way anyways. It is bad for your fuel system, namely your fuel pump. When you run down generally below a 1/4 tank especially when cornering or making turns the fuel left in the tank will slide around more and may cause you to momentarily interupt fuel flow which in the long run could wear out the fuel pump early.
lmao i have always wondering this also haha =]
there wouldnt be crap on the bottom of your tank if you cycled it like it was meant. I love how people never run their tanks empty, b/c all that does is leave all that junk on the bottom.
if all you ever do is keep it full all the time then yes.. .but i always run mine at 1/4 tank or less so i dont have this issue...
I will say this, at over 100K, I had no visible "crap" in the bottom of my fuel tank.
Well, other than sugar, which is why I dropped it in the first place.
Some kids out vandalizing random cars on a night when I forgot to put mine in the garage.
The sugar was still granular, from what I've been able to find, it won't dissolve in gasoline, so it really did nothing other than sit there. With the way our system is routed, very little made it into the tank anyway. I still cleaned it out ASAP, though.
Yeah, I would have thought so, too, but I still had granular sugar at the bottom of the tank, and I found this on snopes:
Sugar doesn't dissolve in gasoline, as a researcher at Berkeley confirmed in 1994. Forensics professor John Thornton labeled sucrose with radioactive carbon atoms and mixed it with gasoline, then spun the concoction in a centrifuge. After the undissolved particles were removed, the liquid's radiation level was measured to determine how much sucrose had become part of the gasoline. The answer was extremely little: the equivalent of less than a teaspoonful per 15-gallon tank of gas.
snopes.com: Sugar in the Gas Tank
guess its time for a locking gas cap... that sucks though
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