anyone here with any experience with black diesel fuel? Like, which filtration methods or equipment you use, and any results (good and bad)?I usually have close to 200 gallons of waste engine oil per year, and have several older tractors to burn it in..my 903 cummins powered 4X4 would be a perfect candidate... Back in it's heyday, when it was in semi tractors, Cummins actually had a feature that would draw out about a gallon of crankcase oil and inject in into the fuel tanks this was done after X number of miles There was an onboard reservoir that would automatically replace that oil with new... The operator only needed to replace filters, and keep the tank topped off with new oil.I've read that some are using it on on-the-road applications.... but with fuel inspectors and their 'scopes'... I'd sure hate to write the check on that fine!!getting it cleaned down to 1-2 microns is simple enough, getting all traces of water/antifreeze is paramount.I'd like to probably go with a 15-20% mix.. I'm looking for lube qualities first, cheaper operating costs second. ( when the disk is in the ground, 20 gallons per hour are up in smoke!) The upside to this is more power (more BTU"S) per gallon.. And my old '903 was designed for fuel that is more slippery than today's 'dry fuel'..
anyone here with any experience with black diesel fuel? Like, which filtration methods or equipment you use, and any results (good and bad)?I usually have close to 200 gallons of waste engine oil per year, and have several older tractors to burn it in..my 903 cummins powered 4X4 would be a perfect candidate... Back in it's heyday, when it was in semi tractors, Cummins actually had a feature that would draw out about a gallon of crankcase oil and inject in into the fuel tanks this was done after X number of miles There was an onboard reservoir that would automatically replace that oil with new... The operator only needed to replace filters, and keep the tank topped off with new oil.I've read that some are using it on on-the-road applications.... but with fuel inspectors and their 'scopes'... I'd sure hate to write the check on that fine!!getting it cleaned down to 1-2 microns is simple enough, getting all traces of water/antifreeze is paramount.I'd like to probably go with a 15-20% mix.. I'm looking for lube qualities first, cheaper operating costs second. ( when the disk is in the ground, 20 gallons per hour are up in smoke!) The upside to this is more power (more BTU"S) per gallon.. And my old '903 was designed for fuel that is more slippery than today's 'dry fuel'..