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Lossie **
Joined: 13 Jun 2003 Posts: 65 Location: Moray
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Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2004 0:10 Post subject: Alternative Diesel |
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I saw Scrapheap Challenge this evening and one of the teams was running a Diesel engine on old chip oil !! Is this true? Is it legal ?? |
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Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2004 0:10 Post subject: Google Ads keep this community free to join! |
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rallycol Newbie
Joined: 24 Dec 2003 Posts: 4 Location: NW
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Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2004 0:50 Post subject: |
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Totally legal ,but you are supposed to pay duty on it ! Pay the duty once keep the receipt ,then drive forever |
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Leo *
Joined: 10 Dec 2003 Posts: 37 Location: Norwich
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Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2004 21:18 Post subject: |
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On the subject of alternative fuels...my Dad-in-law ran his Audi diesel on heating oil @ 10p per litre and it covered over 90k using it! I tried it in my old 2.8td Trooper and didn't notice any difference either, but I never had the bottle to try a full tank - I used to mix it 50/50. Try this site for info on alternative fuels for diesel engines..... www.journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_svo.html. Sorry I can't place it as a link but I'm not that clever yet!!
Keep truckin'.
Leo. _________________ '92 Lotus Bighorn 3.1 |
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Leo *
Joined: 10 Dec 2003 Posts: 37 Location: Norwich
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Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2004 21:24 Post subject: |
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Blow me! It posted as a link - I'm smarter than wot I thought!!
Leo _________________ '92 Lotus Bighorn 3.1 |
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pikeyboy *
Joined: 09 Jan 2004 Posts: 23
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2004 12:21 Post subject: |
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I have been running my 3.1 on it for a while now and use a 50 50 mix new veg oil to diesel. I didnt run it on veg oil when the temp dropped v low recently as it is a tiny bit more difficult to start, runs fine when warm though. My mates and i have run various typs and makes of cars on it over the years without any probs.....45p a litre from the cash and carry for a 20 litre drum is more expensive than using the kwik save specail but you can only get that in 3 litre containers. |
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trooper *
Joined: 18 May 2003 Posts: 27 Location: Staffordshire, UK
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frank sucevic Lifetime member
Joined: 29 Jan 2005 Posts: 1037 Location: rotherham
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Posted: Fri Aug 05, 2005 7:11 Post subject: |
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Be carefull chaps you will have the excise men round its about a £500 pound spot fine. frank sucevic. |
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shinz ****
Joined: 04 Dec 2004 Posts: 352 Location: Nelson, New Zealand
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Posted: Fri Aug 05, 2005 12:47 Post subject: |
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I read on another forum of them being described as the "frying squad" apparently your exhaust smells like a fish & chip shop when running on biodiesel
Cheers, Steve. _________________ 95 Bighorn Fieldstar LS 3.1 TD |
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davedgreat Guest
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Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2005 21:15 Post subject: |
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got this on one of the links, about Gumming up the engine
Vegetable oil is made up from three molecules of a fatty acid chemically bonded by nature to one molecule of Glycerol. If you think of the letter E, the vertical line of the E is the glycerol and the horizontal lines are the three fatty acids.
It so happens that the natural fatty acids in vegetable oil have between 18 and 22 carbon atoms in them, which is pretty much a perfect mixture for a diesel engine.
From cold, you cannot start a Diesel engine on vegetable oil - it just won't vaporize or atomize in the cold, but if you pre-heat the vegetable oil or get the engine hot on normal diesel, and then switch to cold vegetable oil, the engine will run OK for a reasonable length of time. Your DIY kit will do one of the above to get over the cold starting problem.
But the BIG problem is with the Glycerol molecule - in the engine it forms gums and resins - and eventually blocks the injectors or gums up the piston rings - and you will then need an engine overhaul.
If you do want to run on a vegetable oil based renewable fuel, then you should run what is called bio-diesel. This is a chemically modified form of vegetable oil, where the Glycerol has been stripped away in a simple chemical reaction, leaving just the fatty acid molecules in the fuel.
Bio-diesel is used in exactly the same way as petroleum diesel, and NO modification needs be made to the engine at all.
So please, either stick with conventional diesel, or the new diesel with 5% or more of bio-diesel, or some garages sell 100% bio-diesel (like the RIX stations near Hull) in a reasonable attempt at a renewable fuel.
There is an immediate EU directive for between 5% and 10% of bio-diesel to be added to petroleum diesel throughout Europe.
If you mix vegetable oil with petroleum diesel, that will get over the cold starting problem, but you still need to be prepared for the expense of the "de-coke" to remove the glycerol resins inside the engine.
Please do not confuse Bio-diesel with Vegetable Oil, they are not the same thing at all.
Dave |
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Matty *
Joined: 30 Jul 2005 Posts: 13 Location: Northants
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Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2005 21:50 Post subject: Alternative Diesel |
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Guys - Big cautionary note here please. Using un refined vegetable oil or used cooking fat is not a long term option. As stated resins form and not just in the engine but more importantly in your diesel fuel pump an expensive failure.
Some info for you - Forecourt diesel must meet a specification called EN590 (you'll see it on the pumps). The maximum amount of bio-diesel that can be put into forecourt diesel and still meet this spec is 5%. Hence Rix petroleum, Tesco (Global diesel), Broadland fuels, Petroplus etc sell product to this spec. More importantly still the biodiesel blended in must meet EN14214 - this prevents any unrefined rubbish being used.
Yes you can use higher blends but you will invalidate ANY warranty you have on your vehicle. Higher blends can attack rubber seals and gaskets.
For stations selling Bio-diesel visit www.est.org.uk and look at the refuelling map.
For more info also visit www.vegburner.co.uk |
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mgirdwood **
Joined: 23 Feb 2004 Posts: 51
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Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2005 8:43 Post subject: |
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approximately how many miles would we be looking at roughly until engine gunks up?
thinking about using it on the 10yr old diesel fiesta, on its 2nd go around the clock & due to retire shortly _________________ The worlds most expensive driveway ornament
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frank sucevic Lifetime member
Joined: 29 Jan 2005 Posts: 1037 Location: rotherham
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Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2005 10:31 Post subject: |
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it seems better in non turbo charged engines(so i have been told) |
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Paul.K ***
Joined: 27 Jan 2004 Posts: 226 Location: Thames Valley
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Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2005 1:04 Post subject: |
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Hi there, I've thought about it long and hard but even as tight as I am I couldn't bear the thought of replacing a fuel pump or anything else expensive. I would have nightmares about it
Cheers _________________ Paul.K/LuckyTrucker |
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yangreen ***
Joined: 18 Mar 2005 Posts: 141
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Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2005 10:57 Post subject: |
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A little white spirit apparently helps prevent gunging. Wouldn't try it on the 3.0 though! Common rail diesels can't cope with it generally. _________________ Bob's affordable classics - BIG cowboy!! |
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frank sucevic Lifetime member
Joined: 29 Jan 2005 Posts: 1037 Location: rotherham
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Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2005 19:11 Post subject: |
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heating oil as in central heating is what you mix it with same price as red 50/50 allthough its a acelerant the cooking oil calms it down plus 5ltr of good engine oil to a 45 gallon drum this allso gives the top half of your engine a good decoke when you go back on pump fuel as you arrive back in england you feel like you have a new engine (or so ive been told) frank sucevic |
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