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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?


wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?


Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...

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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:

wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?


Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...


Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

on 2/2/2008 8:44 AM Dr. Hardcrab said the following:

wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?


Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do
you do? Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...



Diesel fuel is going for $3.56 to $3.80 a gallon around here.
Kerosene is about $3.90 a gallon
Heating oil is $2.93 to 3.39 a gallon.
Looks like heating oil is the cheapest, for me anyway.

--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
To email, remove the double zeroes after @
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?


"Pete C." wrote in message
...
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:

wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?


Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you
do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...


Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


That is not entirely correct. I was checking out the use of furnace fuel oil
to power my standby generator. I contacted a number of major oil companies
and got some surprising answers. Apparently, in some small markets, fuel oil
and diesel are identical, but sometimes and in high demand areas they are
different. They both use the same base stock but diesel is required to have
a certain quality and "cetane" level (equivalent to octane in gasoline) to
prevent damage to engines, furnace oil does not and (these are my own words
because they would not come out and admit it) since it only burns oil, they
can ship any old **** they have around that fits the basic specifications
for furnace oil --- this stuff they warned not to use in engines.

So there is a reason other than taxes, that diesel is more expensive than
fuel oil. You can use diesel fuel in a furnace, as it is the good stuff, but
don't use fuel oil in your engine, because it may damage the engine if they
are shipping the junk oil.




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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?

Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...


Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?


"George" wrote in message
...
Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you
do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...


Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.


People who have outdoor fuel oil tanks have the same jelling problems as
vehicles, I would assume that winter heating oil in cold climates is
"adjusted" similarly to vehicle fuel.
In this area #1 heating oil is thin, probably mostly kerosene and used in
"heaters" that don't pump the oil into the combustion chamber, #2 heating
oil is thicker and used in fuel oil burners. Diesel oil is rated as #2
diesel for use in engines and #1 version of diesel oil is jet fuel grade.


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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

On Sat, 02 Feb 2008 11:41:59 -0500, George
wrote:

Pete C. wrote:

Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.


In addition, the sulphur content in home heating oil is significantly
higher than that of on-road diesel -- upwards of 5,000 ppm, whereas
ULSD is limited to 15 ppm or less. Marine diesel, or what is commonly
known as "Bunker C", is the dirtiest of all; it can reach as high as
45,000 ppm! [Something to think about when you book your next holiday
cruise.]

Cheers,
Paul
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

George wrote:
Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...

can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

....
Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.


It's a whole lot more complicated than that...

"...multifunctional diesel fuel additive packages are built around ...
dispersant/detergent technology which meets the requirements for
....injector cleanliness. ... The detergent can be combined with other
functional components such as lubricity improver, cold flow improver,
deicer, cetane improver, corrosion inhibitor and/or demulsifier to
deliver additional benefits..."

W/O the additional lubricity specifically, no modern diesel engine will
last long and the injector-cleanliness requirements as well as S limits
on road-fuels are significant factors. Underneath, yes, it's "fuel
oil", but the engine-diesel is far more sophisticated a product.

--
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

dpb wrote:
George wrote:
Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...

can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

...
Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is
sold as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is
sold in a freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to
minimize fuel gelling effects.


It's a whole lot more complicated than that...


Agree.

"...multifunctional diesel fuel additive packages are built around ...
dispersant/detergent technology which meets the requirements for
...injector cleanliness. ... The detergent can be combined with other
functional components such as lubricity improver, cold flow improver,
deicer, cetane improver, corrosion inhibitor and/or demulsifier to
deliver additional benefits..."

W/O the additional lubricity specifically, no modern diesel engine will
last long and the injector-cleanliness requirements as well as S limits
on road-fuels are significant factors. Underneath, yes, it's "fuel
oil", but the engine-diesel is far more sophisticated a product.

--


I didn't want to get into it that deep but what you wrote is accurate.
My buddy has a liquid fuels business and he often tells me of all of the
hassles of keeping track of all of this and the multiple trips his
trucks have to run for the separate products.


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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

EXT wrote:
"George" wrote in message
...
Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you
do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...
Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.

It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.


People who have outdoor fuel oil tanks have the same jelling problems as
vehicles, I would assume that winter heating oil in cold climates is
"adjusted" similarly to vehicle fuel.
In this area #1 heating oil is thin, probably mostly kerosene and used in
"heaters" that don't pump the oil into the combustion chamber, #2 heating
oil is thicker and used in fuel oil burners. Diesel oil is rated as #2
diesel for use in engines and #1 version of diesel oil is jet fuel grade.


I think you may be mixing a few terms. "Diesel oil" is a product that
varies according to climate and isn't a specific oil # grade. #1 is
kerosene by definition. Jet fuel isn't diesel. In the case of commonly
used Jet A it is a very clear higher purity version of kerosene.
Antimicrobial and other agents are typically added during fueling.

At least around here they don't miz oils used for heating purposes. If
someone has an outside tank they will deliver #1 unless you specifically
tell them otherwise. If you have an underground or inside tank they will
deliver #2 unless you tell them otherwise. There are also other heavier
grades of fuel oil that are commonly used but they aren't used to heat
homes.
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

George wrote:

Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...


Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.


It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.


The same applies to heating oil sold in the same climate since some
folks have outdoor above ground oil tanks just as vulnerable to gelling
as a vehicle.
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

heating oil IS #1 diesel.

s


wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?



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"S. Barker" wrote:
heating oil IS #1 diesel.


Not necessarily. Sometimes it's #2 diesel. Sometimes
it's a mix of the two. And sometimes it's #2 with
additives to keep it from getting thick a colder temps.

(One effect of the above is that if you buy heating oil
in bulk it is *essential* to make sure the supplier is
aware that fuel bought in the summer will be stored and
used in the winter. Otherwise it is possible to get a
great deal on "summer grade" stove oil, and have a tank
full of jelly come cold weather.)

Moreover, Both #1 and #2 "diesel" are regionally
defined, with each refinery deciding exactly what they
will sell under those names.

--
Floyd L. Davidson http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska)


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S. Barker wrote:
heating oil IS #1 diesel.

s


wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?




No
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"S. Barker" wrote in message
...
heating oil IS #1 diesel.

s


Not here in CT. It is #2


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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

Pete C. wrote:
George wrote:
Pete C. wrote:
"Dr. Hardcrab" wrote:
wrote in message
...
can i use diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace? if so wich diesel
can i use?
Yes, or K-1 (kerosene).

I know. You aren't on automatic delivery and if you run out, what do you do?
Keep a couple of 5 gallon cans around...
Yes, essentially the only differences between the #2 heating oil in your
tank and the #2 diesel at the pump are the transportation fuel taxes you
pay at the pump and the red dye they put in the non taxed heating oil.
Otherwise they are interchangeable functionally, and the heating oil is
also known as "off road diesel" since it's legal to use in off road
equipment.

It is a little more complicated than that. Diesel fuel typically is sold
as "diesel fuel" not a particular # oil. If the diesel fuel is sold in a
freezing climate a certain percentage of #1 is mixed in to minimize fuel
gelling effects.


The same applies to heating oil sold in the same climate since some
folks have outdoor above ground oil tanks just as vulnerable to gelling
as a vehicle.


It is done much differently. They don't blend the oil and offer "heating
oil" except at point of delivery if that is what you specify. They sell
#1 or #2 for home use and if they have never delivered to you they will
ask if you have an outside tank. If so they will flag your account as
requiring #1.
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In article , Pete C. says...

"Floyd L. Davidson" wrote:

wrote:
On Sat, 02 Feb 2008 20:54:48 -0900,
(Floyd L.
Davidson) wrote:

(One effect of the above is that if you buy heating oil
in bulk it is *essential* to make sure the supplier is
aware that fuel bought in the summer will be stored and
used in the winter. Otherwise it is possible to get a
great deal on "summer grade" stove oil, and have a tank
full of jelly come cold weather.)

While this makes sense, why would anyone use heating oil in the
summer? Anyone working for an oil supplier company, should know it's
for winter use........ Otherwise they need to get another job, or
apply for mental health care.....


I'm sure you meant that kindly, but it *is* hilariously
ignorant!

Summers in some places continue to require heat on many,
though probably not all, days. Plus, if you order a 3
month supply of stove oil in a place like Fairbanks
Alaska, it might be 95F on the day you order it in
August, but it might be -45F on the day in November when
the next order is delivered.

On the other hand, in many locations around Alaska the
order is place before the end of July, arrives in August
or September... and is a 1 year supply.


Some folks also like to have hot water as well, and if they heat the
house with oil they usually also heat the hot water with oil.


Right. Either tankless coil or indirect tank.

Banty

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"George" wrote in message
It is done much differently. They don't blend the oil and offer "heating
oil" except at point of delivery if that is what you specify. They sell #1
or #2 for home use and if they have never delivered to you they will ask
if you have an outside tank. If so they will flag your account as
requiring #1.


Or they put in an additive for the #2. Many places around here do not do
#1


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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

Banty wrote:

In article , Pete C. says...

"Floyd L. Davidson" wrote:

wrote:
On Sat, 02 Feb 2008 20:54:48 -0900,
(Floyd L.
Davidson) wrote:

(One effect of the above is that if you buy heating oil
in bulk it is *essential* to make sure the supplier is
aware that fuel bought in the summer will be stored and
used in the winter. Otherwise it is possible to get a
great deal on "summer grade" stove oil, and have a tank
full of jelly come cold weather.)

While this makes sense, why would anyone use heating oil in the
summer? Anyone working for an oil supplier company, should know it's
for winter use........ Otherwise they need to get another job, or
apply for mental health care.....

I'm sure you meant that kindly, but it *is* hilariously
ignorant!

Summers in some places continue to require heat on many,
though probably not all, days. Plus, if you order a 3
month supply of stove oil in a place like Fairbanks
Alaska, it might be 95F on the day you order it in
August, but it might be -45F on the day in November when
the next order is delivered.

On the other hand, in many locations around Alaska the
order is place before the end of July, arrives in August
or September... and is a 1 year supply.


Some folks also like to have hot water as well, and if they heat the
house with oil they usually also heat the hot water with oil.


Right. Either tankless coil or indirect tank.

Banty


Or oil fired standalone water heater, for a bit better overall
efficiency.
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On Sun, 03 Feb 2008 05:45:28 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:

Some folks also like to have hot water as well, and if they heat the
house with oil they usually also heat the hot water with oil.


Exactly. Most homes in our neighbourhood are heated with oil-fired
boilers equipped with internal DHW coils, or in some cases indirect
hot water tanks. In homes with forced air heating systems, a stand
alone oil-fired water heater is commonly used -- older homes with
smaller electrical services in particular.

We use between 450 and 500 litres of heating oil each year for DHW
purposes; a little over a litre a day during the summer months when
inlet temperatures are higher and one and a half litres in winter when
supply temperatures are lower, additional loads of laundry are run
(larger, bulkier and heavier clothing) and longer (and hotter) showers
are preferred. This is a trivial amount of oil compared to most
households, but it represents over half of our total consumption, so
it's the logical place to target if we want to further reduce our
demand [at this point, we're down to roughly 830 litres or 220
gallons/year... the previous homeowners used over 5,700!].

I haven't pulled the trigger as yet, but I'm thinking of adding a Nyle
heat pump to take over much of the work of the boiler, assuming it's
compatible with our SuperStor Ultra tank.

For information on the Nyle heat pump, see:
http://www.nyletherm.com/waterheating.htm

Right now, I can shoot down to Bangor and throw one in the back of the
Chrysler for a little over $800.00 CDN. With an average COP of 2.0,
it would cut our water heating costs in half, plus minimize, or even
eliminate, the need to run the dehumidifier during the summer months.
Between May and September, our dehumidifier averages between 5 and 10
kWh/day, so the Nyle could assume full responsibility for this service
and, in the process, provide us with free hot water. Even with our
modest requirements, factoring in our dehumidifier savings should
reduce our simple payback to just under three years.

Cheers,
Paul


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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

#1, #2, the question was "can i use diesel in home heating". #1. or #2.
it's still diesel. And i doubt your's is #2 in that climate.

s


"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
...

"S. Barker" wrote in message
...
heating oil IS #1 diesel.

s


Not here in CT. It is #2



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On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 10:40:25 -0600, "S. Barker"
wrote:

#1, #2, the question was "can i use diesel in home heating". #1. or #2.
it's still diesel. And i doubt your's is #2 in that climate.

s


Our local dealers (Halifax, N.S.) stopped offering #1 three or four
years ago and this caused problems for folks with oil stoves/space
heaters; in most cases, a simple carburetor adjustment did the trick,
but in a few instances, homeowners were completely out of luck.

Interestingly, low sulphur heating oil may offer superior
low-temperature performance; to whit:

".... Don Allen, Jr., President of E.T. Lawson, says his technicians
are discovering clear evidence that the amount of scaling in low
sulfur-burning furnaces is comparatively less than systems used with
regular #2 oil. The corporation is so convinced of low sulfur oil
advantages that it guarantees that the oil will not gel, wax, ice, or
sludge; otherwise, the company promises to clean the entire heating
system for free and refund the cost of the tune-up...."

Source:
http://www.americanoilinvestments.co...ents_4658.html

Cheers,
Paul
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"S. Barker" wrote in message
news
#1, #2, the question was "can i use diesel in home heating". #1. or #2.
it's still diesel. And i doubt your's is #2 in that climate.


Delivery slip says #2

When I was in Italy it was common to use diesel in home heating burners.
Sells for the same high price as heating oil. In mild climates people can
buy five or ten gallons at a time that way.


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"S. Barker" wrote:

#1, #2, the question was "can i use diesel in home heating". #1. or #2.
it's still diesel. And i doubt your's is #2 in that climate.


All my meter slips for heating oil delivery in northwest CT list "#2
Fuel" in the product field.
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

According to George :

I think you may be mixing a few terms. "Diesel oil" is a product that
varies according to climate and isn't a specific oil # grade. #1 is
kerosene by definition.


At the refinery, there's rather more than that - I had a summer job at
a refinery testing the raw feeds straight off the distillation and cracker
units. At the one I worked, they had "heavy" and "light", in diesel,
kerosene, naptha and gasoline - and there was some considerable
crossover and confusion about nomenclature (the specs are what
matter not what they call it) especially at the gasoline end.

The light and heavy kerosenes/diesels/napthas were pretty consistent
straight off the units and were mixed in relatively fixed proportions
to make each of the desired final products with their own naming
conventions (#1 diesel etc).

The light and heavy gasolines were all over the map (some lights were
so light they'd boil in your hand from skin temperature alone), and the
results of mixing had to be tightly monitored to attain the proper
properties. Then of course there's all the stuff about octane ratings...
--
Chris Lewis,

Age and Treachery will Triumph over Youth and Skill
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.
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According to :

I have a neighbor with oil heat. He has a diesel farm tractor. He
always drains fuel from his tank for the tractor. It seems to run ok,
but he's always complaining about gelling in severe cold weather. I'm
not sure if it's because he uses that heating oil, or just a common
problem with diesel engines in general. I know truckers are always
adding stuff to their fuel in winter. This is one reason I wont buy a
diesel tractor. I'll stick with gas.


It's a common issue with diesels. You just have to know about it.
Regular "summer weight" diesel begins to gell/freeze at IIRC,
a few degrees _above_ zero F. "Winter weight" goes to at least -35F.

A oil heat tank that's indoors, buried, or fairly well sheltered will
freeze a lot later than a fuel tank suspended in the wind like in a
tractor. The long and the short of it is that you have to pay more
attention to what _weight_ of diesel you're using in a tractor or
truck than in a oil heating tank in the winter.

Decent modern diesel engines don't care too much about temperature
_provided_ you're using the right weight for the season.

Heck, the Polaris Mine (Little Ellsmere Island, northernmost mine
_ever_ built) used diesel vehicles _exclusively_. Toyota diesel
pickups. Never shut them off unless they were in the garage for
an oil change ;-)
--
Chris Lewis,

Age and Treachery will Triumph over Youth and Skill
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

According to Paul M. Eldridge :

In addition, the sulphur content in home heating oil is significantly
higher than that of on-road diesel -- upwards of 5,000 ppm, whereas
ULSD is limited to 15 ppm or less. Marine diesel, or what is commonly
known as "Bunker C", is the dirtiest of all; it can reach as high as
45,000 ppm! [Something to think about when you book your next holiday
cruise.]


As I recall, Bunker C is also considerably heavier than regular diesel
fuel. Even at only modest temperatures, it has to be preheated to
get it to flow.
--
Chris Lewis,

Age and Treachery will Triumph over Youth and Skill
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.
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"Paul M. Eldridge" wrote in message

As I recall, Bunker C is also considerably heavier than regular diesel
fuel. Even at only modest temperatures, it has to be preheated to
get it to flow.


I've never laid eyes on the stuff myself, but its been described to me
as the scrapings from the bottom of the barrel.... with a viscosity
not unlike that of asphalt. ;-)

Cheers,
Paul


We used to burn it where I worked years ago. It had to be delivered hot
(IIRC, about 125) in order to drain from the tanker truck. We'd start the
boilers on #2 oil and a steam probe from the boiler into an intermediate
tank heated it to a pumpable oil. Another pump circulated that back into
the 10,000 gallon #6 tank to keep it warm. More difficult to burn, it was
much cheaper to buy and has a higher Btu per gallon compared to #2.


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On Wed, 06 Feb 2008 03:17:35 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski"
wrote:

"Paul M. Eldridge" wrote in message

As I recall, Bunker C is also considerably heavier than regular diesel
fuel. Even at only modest temperatures, it has to be preheated to
get it to flow.


I've never laid eyes on the stuff myself, but its been described to me
as the scrapings from the bottom of the barrel.... with a viscosity
not unlike that of asphalt. ;-)

Cheers,
Paul


We used to burn it where I worked years ago. It had to be delivered hot
(IIRC, about 125) in order to drain from the tanker truck. We'd start the
boilers on #2 oil and a steam probe from the boiler into an intermediate
tank heated it to a pumpable oil. Another pump circulated that back into
the 10,000 gallon #6 tank to keep it warm. More difficult to burn, it was
much cheaper to buy and has a higher Btu per gallon compared to #2.


Hi Edwin,

The major hospitals and universities in downtown Halifax burn Bunker
C, as does the Tuft's Cove GS located on the Dartmouth side of the
harbour. Our natural gas distributor is currently extending its
pipeline into the downtown core to serve these loads, so thankfully, a
little less of this crap will make its way up the stack.
Unfortunately, the situation with Nova Scotia Power wouldn't likely
change anytime soon, as the utility prefers to sell off its allotment
of natural gas to New England and thereby pocket the difference in the
cost of these two fuels (personally, I wouldn't mind paying a little
more for cleaner air, but obviously opinions differ).

Cheers,
Paul
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Default diesel fuel in a home fuel oil furnace?

On Feb 11, 7:21*am, (Chris Lewis) wrote:
According to Paul M. Eldridge :





On Tue, 05 Feb 2008 21:03:10 -0000, (Chris
Lewis) wrote:
According to Paul M. Eldridge :


In addition, the sulphur content in home heating oil is significantly
higher than that of on-road diesel -- upwards of 5,000 ppm, whereas
ULSD is limited to 15 ppm or less. *Marine diesel, or what is commonly
known as "Bunker C", is the dirtiest of all; it can reach as high as
45,000 ppm! *[Something to think about when you book your next holiday
cruise.]
As I recall, Bunker C is also considerably heavier than regular diesel
fuel. *Even at only modest temperatures, it has to be preheated to
get it to flow.

I've never laid eyes on the stuff myself, but its been described to me
as the scrapings from the bottom of the barrel.... with a viscosity
not unlike that of asphalt. ;-)


I had a summer job in an oil refinery, testing products in the lab.
I don't think that refinery produced any bunker C, it all either
went into asphalt (at the time, this refinery produced 85% of Ontario's
road building asphalt, plus specialty asphalts/tars) or further processing
for lube oil base stocks (at the time the most advanced lube production
facility in North America).
--
Chris Lewis,

Age and Treachery will Triumph over Youth and Skill
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Yep, You ain't a gonna see bunker C being delivered to homes. Any
place that uses it (really big installations or ships) heats it before
use.

Harry K
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D2, D6, JP54,A1 EN590, M100, GASOLINE, FUEL OIL, ULTRA-LOW-SULFUR DIESEL, AVAILABLE ON SELLER TANK FOB ROTTERDAM/HOUSTON. Contact information for offer

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