Over 6 months old can cause starting problems. I'm told they make it not so volatile now, for safety, and because modern ignitions are powerful enough to handle it.
I've done a lot of work over the last 20 years for oil majors on the refining end that produce fuels. I'm not an employee, but I consult around the information technology edges.The important thing about fuel is how it is stored. Petrol, mogas, whatever you want to call it contains many of what are referred to as volatile organic compounds (VOC's). VOC's are compounds that evaporate easily from liquid and can escape into the atmosphere. Any loss of VOC's for refineries is bad thing. It repesents a potential environmental exposure and what is referred to as a "quality give-away". ie we've made this stuff to this spec, and now we're letting it spoil to below spec.
If you've ever seen a picture of a "tank farm" at a refinery, you will see some tanks that have fixed lids, and some where you can't see the lids. That's because they are floating lids that float with as near as possible to the stored liquid with air tight seals on top of the product - petrol, avgas, or intermediate feed stock. This is to minimise loss of VOC's by saturating the surrounding air by minimising the surrounding air.
Over 6 months old can cause starting problems
Leave it in your tank for that long, quite possibly, although that will depend on the compression ratio. Put it in low compression tractor - no problem. Governments all over the world store mogas and jet spirit for military purposes for very long periods...just need isolation from the atmosphere.
I'm told they make it not so volatile now, for safety, and because modern ignitions are powerful enough to handle it
Depends on your definition of volatile. There is a common confusion between volatile (easily evapourate into air) and flammable (low ignition point). It is true that premium fuels have a greater "octance density" (so for example, in a ducati twin with a PHF pumper carb, for a 98 octane fuel you will want to reduce the number of CC's per pump to keep your fuel/air mixture optimal). Regardless, it ain't for safety. The key change is more around the ability to control fuel mixture using computer controlled fuel injection. Oil companies would love to make fuel less "volatile", but to my knowledge that ain't what's happening for fuels other than diesel.
Kev