Nope, adding new gas to old just makes a larger batch of bad gas.
Glaciers are formed from compacted snow that accumulates over time, which can be thousands of years old. Since they are composed of frozen freshwater, the ice in glaciers is considered to be fresh water. When glaciers melt, they release freshwater into streams, rivers, and oceans.
Fresh water bodies like rivers and lakes typically have sediment at the bottom, which may include a mix of organic materials, minerals, and silt. While this sediment may resemble soil, it is not the same as soil found on land. Soil is formed through the weathering of rocks and organic matter accumulation over time, a process that does not occur in fresh water bodies.
Glaciers are formed from the compaction of snow, therefore they are strictly a fresh water formation.
A medium size body of fresh water surrounded by land is called a lake. Lakes can vary in size and shape, and are formed by various natural processes such as tectonic activity, glaciation, or volcanic activity. Lakes are important habitats for aquatic plants and animals, and provide natural resources for human use.
Of all the water on Earth, around 2.75% of it is fresh drinking water.
Old gasoline turns varnish like and coats injectors and spark plugs and gums up carburetors. you should dilute with lots of fresh gas or siphon out the old.
It will dissolve faster in fresh water.
Fresh fully charged battery and fresh gasoline
coat them with nail varnish remover... just a thin layer
non poll-er
I suppose that the dissolution is faster in fresh water but the differences are minimal.
Gasoline that has turned to varnish in the system. Smell the gas tank filler. Varnish or fresh gas smell. Varnish smell - remove the gas and put at leat five gals back in. Remove spark plugs and spray wd40 and let sit an hour. Oil black or clear. Black - change oil and filter. Add 1/2qt of transmission fluid to oil. Absoutely do not race the engine if it cranks up. Only give it enought gas to keep it running. if you get it running just let it idle for an hour.
I would think it would dissolve faster in fresh water, as the fresh water doesn't have anything dissolved in it yet whereas the salt water has dissolved salts and so less room for the sugar molecules. A. yes; sugar does dissolve faster than salt does, in fresh water.
magic
It dissolves faster in fresh water
Salt water
Half tank or less, fill it with fresh gasoline and drive it. More than a half tank you may want to consider draining some and refill with fresh gasoline then drive it.