I have found they are fine for short term use. But if left in place even for a few hours will cause deformation and cracking of the EPA liner, and inner EPA liner separation resulting in restricted fuel flow or plugging of the fuel line at a later period of time with the newer low permeation fuel lines.A hose pinch tool works great if there's no shut off- they don't damage the line unless the line is already brittle.
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I have found they are fine for short term use. But if left in place even for a few hours will cause deformation and cracking of the EPA liner, and inner EPA liner separation resulting in restricted fuel flow or plugging of the fuel line at a later period of time with the newer low permeation fuel lines.
Date code depends on manufacturer. In the case of Kohler they use a unique code to start their year This year serial numbers would start with 54 so say a 46 would be 2016.Right- I wouldn't leave it pinched for long without knowing the type of fuel line and I would doubt it's actually made for fuel that contains Ethanol. The line seems OK, but the mower is from 2011, if I'm reading the serial number correctly (first six characters are the date, right?)
I had to replace fuel lines on a few of my snow blowers in the past and on many boats because of the Ethanol and it's just cheap insurance.
A tournament ski boat manufacturer sent a service memo to dealers about fuel lines delaminating internally because at the time, MTBE was added and it gave mechanics fits because it really wasn't expected in boats that were only 5 years old (this was in about 1998).
Ethanol in fuel needs to go away.
Mine has a Briggs 17.5 HP engine. I was asking about the label under/behind the seat. Engine S/N is in the attachment. I think 13 years of Ethanol is about long enough and since it will take about three minutes to change it....Date code depends on manufacturer. In the case of Kohler they use a unique code to start their year This year serial numbers would start with 54 so say a 46 would be 2016.