Hello,
I've got a small stockpile of gas (about 30 gallons) Anyways I want to store it can someone recommend a good stabilizer? Thanks
1) Keep rotating the stock like you would food in a pantry -- remember to date code a tag on the cans. (i.e. so you don't keep "saving" the oldest stuff...) BTW you are actually better off with several smaller containers (say 5 gallon cans) than you are with a single larger container (reduces evaporation & introduction of water vapor via condensation, etc).
2) Depending on what you intend to use the gas for, Stabil is pretty good stuff --
http://www.goldeagle.com/sta-bil/ -- this is what we recommended and had very good results with when I was with technical services at Simplicity Manufacturing (major lawn & garden manufacturer), and it was also heartily endorsed by the tech people I knew at the major small engine mfr's -- including Briggs & Stratton, Tecumseh, and Kohler engines.
3) Probably NOT the best to use any stabilized fuels for any length of time with high-compression fuel-injection automobile engines. (And also keep in mind that the fuel at gas stations is formulated differently depending on the season of the year... so if you save a lot of gasoline in the summer, you will be using a summer formula in the winter & vice versa).
4) Storing gasoline really doesn't save you any money (FIFO or LIFO doesn't make any difference -- if you burn the "cheap stuff" then you replace it with expensive stuff) --
it's really only a small "insurance" against shortages or emergency needs. It is just not practical to store enough to last any significant length of time.
Here's a pretty good article that covers a few more points:
http://www.alpharubicon.com/altenergy/gasstoretg.htm