JamesWilson
Yoda
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BIo-diesel Update
Update to last year's Bio-diesel topic:
This time last year with fuel prices going up, up, up and with a change in British fuel taxation policy exempting vegetable oil from tax. I started using straight vegetable in my Diesel car.
I found that it could be used at modest concentrations (10-20%) without any problems whatsoever. I tried 50% and then 100% and the car ran fine, so long as the weather stayed warm-ish... which isn't long in Scotland.
Once the weather turned cooler the pure vegeratble oil became too thick to allow the car to start. Starting ether could get it going (with a lot of valve clatter and initial smoke) but it'd then run fine once warmed up.
I replaced the glow plugs and found the old ones covered in black soot. This with pure diesel fixed the cold starting problem.
I did not have any difficulties with fuel tank deposits being loosened by the different fuels, though I had spare fuel filters, just in case.
For practical purposes I do not think that the pure vegetable oil option is viable, though it'd be the cheapest if it were.
It seems to me that a mix of 20-30% vegetable oil and diesel would be the most liveable for the warmer months, switching to pure diesel for the cooler months and winter.
But, given current oil prices the vegetabe oil option is uneconomic if it has to be bought rather than taken as a waste by-product from a restaurant.
The hassle of manually filling the tank was anohter aggravation.
I've resolved to use plain diesel for the future, until some oil crisis turns the taps off completely... then I know I can run a vegetarian car, if I have no other choice. Only then would the price be right, and the hassle worthwhile; and the winterization (heated tank, fuel lines, hotter glowplugs, etc.) needed sensible.
Update to last year's Bio-diesel topic:
This time last year with fuel prices going up, up, up and with a change in British fuel taxation policy exempting vegetable oil from tax. I started using straight vegetable in my Diesel car.
I found that it could be used at modest concentrations (10-20%) without any problems whatsoever. I tried 50% and then 100% and the car ran fine, so long as the weather stayed warm-ish... which isn't long in Scotland.
Once the weather turned cooler the pure vegeratble oil became too thick to allow the car to start. Starting ether could get it going (with a lot of valve clatter and initial smoke) but it'd then run fine once warmed up.
I replaced the glow plugs and found the old ones covered in black soot. This with pure diesel fixed the cold starting problem.
I did not have any difficulties with fuel tank deposits being loosened by the different fuels, though I had spare fuel filters, just in case.
For practical purposes I do not think that the pure vegetable oil option is viable, though it'd be the cheapest if it were.
It seems to me that a mix of 20-30% vegetable oil and diesel would be the most liveable for the warmer months, switching to pure diesel for the cooler months and winter.
But, given current oil prices the vegetabe oil option is uneconomic if it has to be bought rather than taken as a waste by-product from a restaurant.
The hassle of manually filling the tank was anohter aggravation.
I've resolved to use plain diesel for the future, until some oil crisis turns the taps off completely... then I know I can run a vegetarian car, if I have no other choice. Only then would the price be right, and the hassle worthwhile; and the winterization (heated tank, fuel lines, hotter glowplugs, etc.) needed sensible.
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
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