Fuel bottles

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c5rulz

c5rulz

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I just picked up some stainless steel bottles @ Walgreen's that were 3 for $10 buckees. They hold 1200ml or 41oz.

I absolutely hate the new CARB compliant gas cans that spill all over. Slamm had a great idea a while back about used bar oil jugs for mixed gas. I like those that have a sight glass on the side with graduated markings so that one can mix a gallon at a time from a bulk 5 gallon can.

vz7ij9.jpg


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Sorry a little too close, (blurry), but they have a nice silicone O ring and hard plastic top with a caribeener.:clap:

2iu5bug.jpg


Slamm's bar oil jugs idea, see the graduated markings.

i1zdqa.jpg


The one on the end I have not tried yet, but it has a nice handle, a 1 gallon refillable water jug.

2hqbh4k.jpg
 
Last edited:
hamish

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I use fuel bottles as well, they work good, never fill them more than 3/4 full or they will crack the bottom of the bottle, you need to leave room for expansion. Make yourself a stencil and spraybomb them saying fuel/gas/dragon piss......whatever will let others know it aint for drinking.

I find they are perfec for when I am travelling on my atv and just might need one more tank of fuel in the saw.
 
MtnHermit

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I've been using 1 Qt oil bottles for gas, for the reason stated above.

For B&C oil when I do trail work, I'm going to try this:

This is the bladder from a 5L Wine box.
Wine5L_1895.jpg


The same bladder with ~2 Qts of B&C oil. The black spigot pops out easily with a screw driver.
Wine5L_1899.jpg


I opened up the spigot with a pen knife, flows surprisingly well. Also, the spigot fits inside the oil hole, the wrap bar is not an issue.

Disadvantage: Handling the oil bag is a bit of a wet noodle. :)
 
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I've been using 1 Qt oil bottles for gas, for the reason stated above.

For B&C oil when I do trail work, I'm going to try this:

This is the bladder from a 5L Wine box.
Wine5L_1895.jpg


The same bladder with ~2 Qts of B&C oil. The black spigot pops out easily with a screw driver.
Wine5L_1899.jpg


I opened up the spigot with a pen knife, flows surprisingly well. Also, the spigot fits inside the oil hole, the wrap bar is not an issue.

Disadvantage: Handling the oil bag is a bit of a wet noodle.

Whats wrong with the plastic one gallon jug the oil came in, its worked well for me and is looking a lot more durable than a wine bladder.
 

expy

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In the slow season I use the Trufuel and keep the empty bottles. When things pick up I then have some good containers to carry fuel in that I mix. Plus, they are already labeled. I like the water bottle idea, they carry more fuel per container.

2012-02-25111420.jpg
 
Last edited:

ancy

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In the slow season I use the Trufuel and keep the empty bottles. When things pick up I then have some good containers to carry fuel in that I mix. Plus, they are already labeled. I like the water bottle idea, they carry more fuel per container.

2012-02-25111420.jpg

This is what I do as it is made for fuel.
 
MtnHermit

MtnHermit

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For B&C oil when I do trail work, I'm going to try this:

This is the bladder from a 5L Wine box.
Wine5L_1895.jpg


The same bladder with ~2 Qts of B&C oil. The black spigot pops out easily with a screw driver.
Wine5L_1899.jpg


I opened up the spigot with a pen knife, flows surprisingly well. Also, the spigot fits inside the oil hole, the wrap bar is not an issue.

Disadvantage: Handling the oil bag is a bit of a wet noodle.

Whats wrong with the plastic one gallon jug the oil came in, its worked well for me and is looking a lot more durable than a wine bladder.
This has to fit in a backpack, plan to put the chaps in the sleeping bag spot, saw in upper compartment, rigid bottles like the OP's SS and a gal B&C bottle take too much space. This guy collapses as I use the oil, besides it's 1/3rd the weight.

Gal_Empty_1898.jpg
 
2dogs

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MSR and Sigg fuel bottles are very common for mix or oil in wildland firefighting. The USFS has specs on the pressure the bottles will hold. MSR bottles are nice because they can be slung from the top with a carabiner. Several companies make packs to hold 2, 4, or 6 1 liter bottles. Let me know if you need pics or links. BTW I paint the oil bottles green. Generally I will have 4 gas and 2 oil bottles in their carry bag.
 
naturelover

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Saving my tru fuel and motomix cans for future fuel use if I switch to the non ethanol gas. Really thinking of just sticking with the trufuel and motomix though, so much easier to store, no worries about mixing it wrong or using the wrong jug, and no worries about leaving in my saw or trimmer.
 
AT sawyer

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Saving my tru fuel and motomix cans for future fuel use if I switch to the non ethanol gas. Really thinking of just sticking with the trufuel and motomix though, so much easier to store, no worries about mixing it wrong or using the wrong jug, and no worries about leaving in my saw or trimmer.

Doing the same. The pre-mix started out high $$, but it's showing up at Home Depot now and like most any other product, will get discounted once sales volume goes up. Better yet, find a station selling non-ethanol gas and make your own.
 
timmcat

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We have cops at UMASS that love to stop landscapers and check their loads for proper strapping and such. They haven't caught on to the gas can issue yet, I still see some grounds guys with old jerry cans on their trucks. Personally I use brass safety cans, they work awesome and dont bulge with the temp changes. The funnels that go with them are a pain but work better than a seperate funnel.
 
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