LikimysCrotchus5 hit it dead on. The stoichimotric ratio for gasoline in air is about ~1.7 mole percent. If the gasoline is vaporized then the mole percent is the same as the volume percent. I suspect that if you convert
markfh11q 14.7 wht. percent into mole percent you'll get ~1.7.
Gasoline is a mixture of a bunch of stuff but the vast majority has the same, or nearly the same, chemical formula (but not chemical structure) as octane. You can go through the calc's with hexane, heptane, octane, iso-octane, nanane (sp?) and you'll find they are all very similar so it really doesn't matter too much. Other things introduce much larger errors than the uncertainty in the exact chemical composition.
The tricky part is measuring the correct amount of a liquid fuel since the volume of the liquid is so much less than the volume of the gas. According to my "
liquid fuels" page a 100in<sup>3</sup> chamber takes 0.184mL of gasoline for a stoichiometric mix with air. (Notice how I mix english and metric units to keep folks on their toes

) That is something in the vicinity of 2 drops liquid gasoline for the 100ci chamber.
Since it is very difficult to measure 2 drops with any kind of accuracy, especially since the high vapor pressure of the gas makes it piddle out of an eyedropper, the exact stoichiometry is the least of your worries.