Hi Peter,
Thanks for posting. I was the one pushing for the fuel lines to be replaced and I share your concerns. My concerns were based on the age of the original hoses that have never been replaced at the rear of the car from the fuel tank up to the engine bay. Apparently the Italian mechanic, (he was one of a half dozen factory trained mechanics brought out to Australia by the local Fiat/Lancia distributor to service these cars), who used to do most of the mechanical work on my father`s car had a hissy fit when dad asked him to replace the fuel lines back to the tank years ago, because he was worried he might not be able to thread the new hose through the box section cavity successfully. He was never very keen on the trickier jobs!
There are clear labelling laws with regards to petrol sold in Australia containing ethanol. My understanding is that petrol containing ethanol, (defined as >1% ethanol), must be clearly labelled as such at the point of sale. All petrol stations in Australia sell ethanol free petrol (or 99% ethanol free I guess) and some sell E10 (petrol containing up to 10% ethanol as well).
http://www.environment.gov.au/topics/environment-protection/fuel-quality/standards/ethanol-e10http://www.environment.gov.au/archive/fuelquality/publications/labelling.htmlThat said there are plenty of unscrupulous operators out there when it comes to petrol distribution and retailing. As usual the fuel testing that does take place by regulatory authorities is probably infrequent and inadequate. I know there were scandals years ago about all sorts of solvents being blended into petrol in Australia to improve the profit margins for dodgy sellers.
We only use Premium Shell V-Power petrol in the Lancia Beta Coupe. Hopefully that largely eliminates any risk of contamination from ethanol or other dodgy additives. It is also supposed to help clean the combustion chamber and carburation system. It also runs better on 98RON fuel! I have been told that it is also more stable in the fuel tank if the car is used infrequently and is less likely or slower to break down and deposit waxes etc in the tank.
So hopefully the fuel hoses have not been exposed to ethanol based on the above but there are no absolute guarantees on that score. I agree it would be prudent to replace those original fuel lines, especially the main supply and return line from and to the tank. I`ll talk to my father about this again. Do you have any links to threads on here about hoses that have failed even though they appeared ok? They might help persuade him to get the hoses renewed!
