[AT] synthetic oil - gas versus diesel trucks
charlie hill
charliehill at embarqmail.com
Wed Nov 23 10:10:30 PST 2016
Scott, probably 15 years ago a friend of mine started cooking his own
biofuel.
He was getting waste cooking oil from another friend that ran a bbq and
seafood
restaurant. He built a rig to process it. I never saw it but it involved
glycerin I think.
He ran it in a VW rabbit diesel until he wore the car out and got tired of
messing with
it. We joked him because the exhaust smelled like french fries.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: Scott Williams
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2016 1:39 PM
To: 'Antique tractor email discussion group'
Subject: Re: [AT] synthetic oil - gas versus diesel trucks
That would be "B10" biodiesel, a common mix, because most modern diesels can
use it without modifications. If you try to use B50 or B100 in cold
weather, you can have problems with gelling. Also, as mentioned, the bio
cleans out deposits in the fuel system, so the first few tanks full can clog
up filters as the sludge and dirt are flushed out of the tank and lines.
I had plans to modify a vehicle to run on pure waste veggie oil for a while,
did lots of research, bought some parts, but never got it done. The biggest
problem with straight veg oil (used) is water content. It can be difficult
to truly dewater the oil, and any tiny water particles can erode away
surfaces in the injection pump. So it feels like you're doing fine, saving
lots of money, then after 50k miles (or less) the pump gives out.
People set up elaborate systems, with settling tanks, sometimes
solar-heated, for dewatering, some even use centrifuges (expensive but
effective.) A quick run through a filter will not do it. The source of the
veg also has a lot to do with the water content - tossing frozen foods into
the fryer gives high water content.
Scott in Penfield NY
-----Original Message-----
From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com
[mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of charlie hill
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2016 11:44 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Subject: Re: [AT] synthetic oil - gas versus diesel trucks
Brad, I have a friend who is an oil jobber. I don't know if he would want
me to
say who his contracts are with but he has a couple of huge contracts to
provide bio diesel on government contracts. Over the years I've done a good
bit of work for him painting, insulating and heat tracing his bio tanks.
Being at the bio terninal for 10 to 12 hours at a time it didn't take me
long to figure out how it works and I confirmed it with his drivers.
He has tanks full of bio fuel, some tanks are veggie oil and some are animal
oils. Tanker trucks from his own company and other jobbers in a large area
will come into the terminal. They have a credit card like card that allows
them to start his pumps and it records what they get. Here's the typical
case. A tractor trailer tanker will come in carrying 6,000 gallons of
conventional diesel fuel.
He'll hook up the hoses and pump 600 gallons of bio oil into the tanker.
He'll drive away and it mixes
it's self while the load goes down the highway. I don't mean there is some
mixing pump or agitator.
It just mixes. That is bio-diesel!
Simple as that.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: Gunnells, Bradley R
Sent: Monday, November 21, 2016 11:25 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] synthetic oil - gas versus diesel trucks
Well comparing the old 6.9/7.3 in the Fords and 5.9 Cummins in Dodge to some
of the more recent diesel offerings are quite different from a noise
perspective. I’ve walked by a few as they were running and did a double take
to see the badging. Couldn’t believe how much quieter they are.
As for the exhaust odor, that is an issue for many people. For a while when
I was driving mine on a daily basis to work, during the summer months I’d go
by my local cooperative and get bio fuel. I had a director where I worked
that was big into renewable energy and was touting it in his VW car. I
forget how he labeled it (dirty mix?) where you’d just take and top off your
fuel tank in your car with bio for whatever percentage you wanted. So I’d
wait until I was down to half tank and then go by and top it off for a 50/50
ration. At one point I ran it at close to a 100% for a little while in my 02
Ford with the 7.3. The only negative during that time was I plugged a fuel
filter with all the cleaning that took place. On the plus side you could
stand by the tailpipe and it had an almost sweet smell to it. And nothing
that would make your eyes water.
Then diesel took a steep rise ($4+ a gallon) and the bio was too rich for my
blood so I stopped using it in that quantity. I still take great interest in
those that use old fryer oil and make their own fuel.
I don’t drive my diesel now unless I need to pull my 5th wheel camper or
haul a tractor/skid loader somewhere. So it sits most of the time. I think
at some point I’m going to find a rust free box from down south and have the
thing repainted. With only 142K on it there are many good miles left.
Besides I can get a lot of work done to it for only a few payments on a new
rig. And as Steve O would say…I wouldn’t be a part of the “science fair
project”. ☺
Brad
On 11/20/16, 6:56 AM, "at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com on behalf of
John Hall" <at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com on behalf of
jtchall at nc.rr.com> wrote:
The noise and smell are my 2 biggest knocks against diesel vehicles. Why
on earth diesel engines in vehicles have to be so %&*$ loud is beyond
me. We've only had 4 pcs of diesel machinery here on this farm--2
4020's, 4430 and a 6620 combine. None of them at full throttle make the
racket a diesel pickup idling does. Lets be honest, Semi-trucks are
quieter than pickups. And then there are the idiots that have to get
more HP and change the exhaust to make it louder. Whatever happened to
walk softly and carry a big stick? Love the durability and longevity of
diesels, just wish Detroit would quit marketing to the same old
defective gene that causes males in this country to "compensate" for
their inadequacies.
John Hall
On 11/19/2016 6:58 AM, Cecil Bearden wrote:
>
> For a daily driver, the gasoline is just more adaptable to start and
> stop driving while working or running errands, and the noise of a
diesel
> is a pain in city driving while running errands, and going through
> drive-thru facilities.
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