Flamer Fuel (Fallout: New Vegas)

Flamer fuel is a type of ammunition

Gameplay
A mixture of petro-chemicals and other flammable compounds for use in specialty flamethrowers.

Recycling
After use, there is a chance that the drained flamer fuel tank will be recovered and placed in the player character's inventory. Drained fuel tanks can then be recycled back into a usable tank at a workbench.

Note that although flamer fuel recipes that require the Vigilant Recycler perk have Science requirements, the Courier's Science skill must be at least 70 in order to acquire the perk itself.

Weapons using this ammunition

 * Flamer
 * Cleansing Flame
 * Flare gun
 * Heavy incinerator
 * Incinerator

Flamer fuel, homemade
Homemade flamer fuel is made from corn-based ingredients to produce an ethanol mixture combined with the flammable properties of detergent to create a deadly fuel mixture. Due to the crude nature of the fuel, homemade fuel severely stresses a flamer, degrading its condition three times as quickly. Every recipe yields 20 units of fuel. A Science skill of 50 is needed to produce the fuel.

Flamer fuel, optimized
Added in Gun Runners' Arsenal, this sub-type causes 30% more damage, provides some Damage Threshold negation, and weighs less than the standard flamer fuel. The only drawbacks are a slight (10%) increase in weapon degradation and increased fuel usage (it takes three regular units to produce two optimized ones). It requires Vigilant Recycler and can only be crafted at a workbench.

Locations

 * Can sometimes be purchased at the Dino Bite gift shop.
 * Can be purchased at the Silver Rush, as flame-throwers are classed as energy weapons.
 * Can also be found on destroyed Mister Gutsy and Mister Handy robots.
 * Can often be found on the Fiends located in Vault 3.
 * Can be purchased from the Boomer munitions manager in the Nellis hangars.
 * ED-E can provide 35 flamer fuel a day after reaching rank 2 of the Camarader-E perk and passing an Explosives 35 check through dialogue with him.

Behind the scenes
Detergents can be used as fuel additives. Typical detergents are long-chain amines and amides such as polyisobuteneamine and polyisobuteneamide/succinimide.