AngryBeaver
Well-known member
The diesel fuel I have stored I use this https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001JT5MGI/?tag=atomicindus08-20
So far, I have not had any issues and it is supposed to keep it from gelling in the winter. The thing about algae, this and another previous post is the first I hear about it. How long can diesel be stored with zero additives before it can have issues?
I suspect the algae problem would be if water get in? I have 2 drums, about 100 gal currently in drums where one hole/spout has a sealed cap and the other is a vented cap like this
https://www.yankeecontainers.com/c/vent-plug-in-drum-plug/
Any tank stored outside will have condensation. Plastic or metal, empty or full. plastic is better, the fuller you can get it, the better. that condensation is water. the water in diesel is what causes the legionous bacteria to grow. the more water, the more bacteria.
Would you know if most diesel engines do fine on home heating fuel or not?
Here diesel fuel at the pump has about 30-40% in "the government calls it road and save the environment tax" but really is "we need money" tax. So home heating fuel is vey cheap....even delivered compared to diesel at the pump. AGR diesel does not have the road taxes but I believe you need to have some kind of "I am a farmer" permit it to buy it.
Since 2014 here in the states, On road fuel, offload fuel (commonly called #2 diesel), And home heating oil are all identical. not sure how canada is though... In 2006, LSD (low sulfur diesel) had 500 PPM sulfur content in it and ULSD (ultra low sulfur) had 15ppm and became the standard for on road (#1 fuel) The higher sulfur would actually produce more power, better lubricity and more harmful emissions. The offroad fuel was still available until 2014 when all on road and off-road fuel became USLD at 15ppm. Since them Its all the same minus color for taxation purposes.. I run my three kubota powered pieces of equipment, My home heating furnace, my garage oil furnace and my MQ whisper watt 7000 generator on "off road fuel" Its dyed red to prevent people from running that in on road vehicles. the home heating oil here in the states is the exact same fuel as on road fuel with the exception of more kerosene added as a freeze protection/antigel in the winter months. You could 100% run home heating oil in your equipment if you uses a quality additive to put that lubricity back into the fuel to protect the injection pump. I myself, use power serives. some guys like hot shots, and some prefer howes. you can do your own research on that.
This is where I get mixed responses. Many tell me they run tractors and other equipment on home heating fuel. Less, but some others feel it is not a good idea.
I'll ask the home heating supplier I used as well as my Kubota dealer...see what they say.
no one is going to tell you to run it, because of the added kerosene in it for freeze protection in winter months, which strips quality lubricants out of the fuel. The dealer won't approve it because of a possible warranty claim, even though the tractor is well out of warranty period.. and then there's the whole legal issue of the home fuel oil people saying sure, run it......
Good to know...I had to look up what a DEF tank is and no, I do not have one. I do not think it has a catalytic converter. I have seen where they stick the cat conv on ne models, so pretty sure I do not have one. But I can check to be sure with my dealer.
DEF is deisel exahust fluid and only used in conjunction with a DPF (diesel particulate filter) All diesel engines under 29 hp are not required to meet those emissions requirements, YET. no sub 30 hp Kubota tractor is equipped with a DEF tank or DPF. the larger MX series do....
Now that I'm done quoting 4 pages worth of replies, now I can offer my 2 cents.
Generator Tech here for 17 years. I live out in the sticks and loose power once or twice a year for a couple days.
I had a gasoline screamer for the first few years I lived here. I'm SOOOOOOO glad i never have to hear that screaming noise box ever again.
Everything I own, except my race car and weed whacker are diesel powered. Everything. No more bad fuel, no more gummed up carbs to clean every time i want to start something that has been sitting....
My kubota tractor, My kubota lawn mower, My old skid steer that i repowered with a Kubota. I bought a MQ whisperwatt 7000 from a guy that i assumed worked oil and gas. he had 5 of them for sale, all missing the internal fuel tanks. They were on skids with 250 gallon tanks to run non stop for months or years at a time. They are commercial units. I bought the last two he had. ordered the tank for the one and sold it for 2K with 2500hours on it. it paid for mine and i made a cart for mine with a 25 gallon tank and electric pump. The MQ uses a 2 cylinder D482 Kubota engine. now, unlike larger gas engines, this one is rated for continuous use at 7Kw. Most gasoline gens that are rated at 10K are only rated for starting or "surge" at 10kw and most will be in the 7500 continous range. It is very fuel efficient. i could use it for 8 hours running my welders on a couple gallons of fuel. It will run my well pump, freezers and my furnace. I recently sold it for 4x what I paid for it only because I ran across a Kubota Low boy (11K, 10K continous). It uses a kubota D722 3 cylinder engine that just happens to be in my lawn mower and i have a spare 722. I've changed all the filters on the tractor, skid steer, lawn mower and generator so everything uses the same filters.
Get rid of the 55 gallon barrels. They rust and condensate badly because they are so thin. Either get a 50 gallon cube tank, or a 100, depending on what your tractor can move. Then invest into a quality pump with 10 micron filter setup. At that point, you won't have to worry about fuel contamination on the gen or tractor because the primary fuel filter is 30 micron on most of these small engines.
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