Get the trickle charger. Youāre not fine just unplugging it.Related to this, I will be storing my car for the winter in a detached garage that is not climate controlled. Should I get a trickle charger for the battery or should I be fine just unplugging the battery?
Donāt do it. Itās not needed.What is the consensus on setting the parking brake for that long?
Northern NY native here, agree with the ājust park itā advice. Fill the tank, crack the windows to let moisture out and put a cover on it, particularly one that covers exhaust pipes (My bro-in-law got a mouse nest in his Camaro exhaust). Use trickle charger. Iāve parked vintage muscle cars and modern muscle cars every winter for years, never had an issue.Let the car sit. Change the oil before it is stored. Over inflate the tires a few pounds to help avoid flat spotting. Get a battery tender. Add Stabil to a full tank. Cover it. Because I live in the NE my car is stored for 5 months with the above procedure.
Iām in agreement with the full tank, no matter the type of gas. Any sort of air pocket in a vented metal enclosure invites water to condense on the walls of the tank wherever fuel isnāt touching. If the condensation is severe enough over time itāll cause water droplets to fall into the fuel.Doesn't matter. So, I understand where you're going with that statement, and I agree in part...but the ullage doesn't care if the gas has ethanol in it or not; it's still exposed area. That exposed area is still subject to corrosion. And, I will argue, as like I previously stated, for such a short amount of time, that's a greater threat than any ethanol...which BTW that's in part what you're adding the fuel stabilizer for.
Full disclosure--I'm not sure what our fuel tanks are made of, but in all your years of storing a vehicle with an empty gas tank, how many have you opened up and inspected after storage? I ask because the thing that broke me of storing anything with an empty tank was doing just that...only to find rust/corrosion everywhere in the tank above the fuel level. This was after fairly short periods of time also; e.g. winter months.
Combined with several years of work experience on this very topic, I'd never store anything empty.
Swap these...do the stabilizer first and then go fill it up. That'll mix it better in the tank and you also want to run it long enough to get the treated gas throughout all the fuel lines.#3 Fill it up with the best gas in your area
#4 put a fuel stabilizer in it
Asuming the best gas is not next to his house it would mix on the way homeSwap these...do the stabilizer first and then go fill it up. That'll mix it better in the tank and you also want to run it long enough to get the treated gas throughout all the fuel lines.
Oh right. I was clarifying don't drive it home and then add a bottle after you're parked.Asuming the best gas is not next to his house it would mix on the way home