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Tracy is right on track here (as if his years of experience need my two cents) with the idea of a solution. The key is getting the oil mixed with the fuel, once there, it will remain in solution. Mixing it with the fuel requires some type of agitation due to the viscosity differences between them. Try mixing corn syrup with water if you need to see what I'm talking about. Once mixed though, you will have no problems.
Take care, Marc M
From: "Tracy Crook" <rotaryaviation@yahoo.com>
snip>
To those concerned about oil "separating out of the fuel when sitting", I
have never seen it happen in 33 years and 2250 flight hours worth of mixing
two stroke oil. Oil and fuel is a "solution" not a mixture, so I don't
think it really happens, at least not with any of the two stroke oils I have
used. The only problem I've ever had was with carbureted engines where I
left fuel in the carb bowls and let it sit & evaporate over an extended
time. This leaves the non volatile components of the mix coating the guts
of the carb which is a real mess to clean up.
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