Yes, they sure are. When this happens you will not be the only vehicle this happens to. There will be multiple vehicles with the same problem. Report the problem to the owner of the station. They all have insurance that should take care of this.
If the station attendant fueled the truck then yes. If it was fueled by the truck driver then of course not.
Have you tried using gas line antifreeze? That will help to remove some of the water in the gas. The best way to make certain all the water is out of the tank is to siphon the gas out, let the tank air out and re-fill the tank with gas from a station you know does not have water in the gas.
water can be pumped in from a leaking underground tank at a gas station or if you leave your gas tank only partially full and the temperature shanges it can cause condensation inside your tank
no such thing as fiber gas station
Yes
It can come in on the tanker truck, the tank could have a leak that lets ground water in, or the lids could let rain water in.
sometimes after heavy rain, a gas station might have rain water leak into it's gas storage tanks, water in a cars gas tank will cause it to stall. Maybe change the place you get your gas.
Yes, but you can go to a gas station and refill your tank.
Sometimes there is water mixed in with the gas. This will certainly create a problem where there was none before. Water in the tank can be very damaging to an engine. There are additives that will help. And afterward try to avoid filling up at that particular gas station.
The only way to know for sure if a person has water in the gas tank is to drain the tank. Usually a car will sputter and die if there is water in the tank.
Drive to a different gas station.
go to a gas station