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Petrol in Diesel Engine
Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6
litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. Please keep (deserved) abuse to a minimum and answers to a maximum! TIA |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
I believe they are different densities and the unleaded will sit on top of
the diesel like salad dressing. I might be better to drain off the tank before the diesel runs out and you start to get unleaded into your engine. As the level of diesel gets lower the sloshing about will cause some of it to be drawn into the engine and it will start chugging. I might well be wrong but the unleaded doesn't burn until the compressed and hot diesel ignites thus causing a kick when the unleaded ignites. Another possibly wrong fact is that putting diesel in an unleaded car is worse as the diesel sinks to the bottom guts sucked into the engine and fails to ignite thus filling up the cylinders. Cheers Jonathan |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"MartinC" wrote in message om... Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. Please keep (deserved) abuse to a minimum and answers to a maximum! TIA Taken from the AA Web Site: 7. Fuel problems Empty fuel tanks cost AA patrols a lot of time and members unnecessary inconvenience. Fill up at the start of your journey. Every year more than 100,000 motorists put the wrong fuel in their car - petrol in diesel engines or vice versa. In these cases the car will have to be recovered to a garage and draining the tank and disposing of contaminated fuel is expensive. --- www.basecuritysystems.no-ip.com Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.509 / Virus Database: 306 - Release Date: 12/08/03 |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
MartinC wrote:
Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). -- Grunff |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Grunff wrote:
MartinC wrote: Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). Wasn't adding a small amount of petrol to diesel a trick used in very cold weather anyway? |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"BillR" wrote in message ... Grunff wrote: MartinC wrote: Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). Wasn't adding a small amount of petrol to diesel a trick used in very cold weather anyway? Yes - this is a perennial problem which appears on NGs from time to time. Petrol into diesel is not usually a problem. I can't remember the percentage but I have at least one car manual which recommends mixing petrol in with diesel in cold winters to prevent waxing. And it doesn't clog the carburettor or foul the plugs :-) As stated elsewhere diesel into petrol is a whole different ball game! Cheers Dave R |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"MartinC" wrote in message
om... Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. Please keep (deserved) abuse to a minimum and answers to a maximum! You should be fine. One of our diesel lease Focus's at work keeps getting petrol in it. According to Ford it can run at about 30% petrol. However keep topping up with diesel (ie. it dilute the mixture) and you should be fine. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"BillR" wrote in message
... Wasn't adding a small amount of petrol to diesel a trick used in very cold weather anyway? Yes, as it lowers he temperature at which diesel stops being liquid like. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"Jonathan@Home" wrote:
I believe they are different densities Yes, they are... and the unleaded will sit on top of the diesel like salad dressing. But they are miscible, unlike, say, oil and water. Another possibly wrong fact is that putting diesel in an unleaded car is worse It's unlikely to fire properly! -- __________________________________________________ ______________ Sent via the PAXemail system at paxemail.com |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"IMM" wrote in message ... "Marcus" wrote in message ... Yep, an old lorry drivers trick for winter for sure, no problems at all caused by the 10% petrol addition. Keep the diesel tank topped up all the times. Every other day to keep the diesel/petrol ratio in favour of diesel. Eventually the petrol will disappear. Hmm..gullible and unscientific, it seems :-) As your 10% petrol in diesel is unlikely to cause you any problems, use at least half the tank, preferably at least 2/3 before refilling. This will ensure you remove most of the petrol quickly then go to almost 100% diesel. i.e. [Assume that the tank hold 100 'units' of fuel] Full tank of 90 units diesel 10 units petrol Use 90% of the tank Tank has 9 units diesel and one unit petrol Fill up with 90 units diesel Full tank with 99 units diesel and one unit petrol (effetively pure diesel). This after using 90 units of fuel and only one visit to the fuel station. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------- Gridingly boring worked example: Full tank of 90 units diesel 10 units petrol Use 10% of the tank Tank has 81 units of diesel and 9 units of petrol Fill up with 10 units of diesel Tank has 91 units of diesel and 9 units of petrol Use 10% of the tank Tank has 81.9 units of diesel 8.1 units of petrol. Fill up with 10 units of diesel Tank has 91.9 units of diesel and 8.1 units of petrol after using 20 units of fuel. Compared to Full tank of 90 units diesel 10 units petrol Use 20% of the tank Tank has 72 units of diesel and 8 units of petrol. Fill up with 20 units of diesel Tank has 92 units of diesel and 8 units of petrol after using 20 units of fuel. So already a small difference is showing in favour of using bigger amounts of fuel before filling up. So long since I did any maths I can't face working out a formula but suffice it to say that it is more effective to use as much of the 10% mix as possible before refilling your tank. Someone out there must know the formula! Damn I must find some motivation to work! Cheers Dave R |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6
litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. Probably not. Diesel's will usually burn any old filth. They're second only to gas turbines (jet engines) in their tolerance. Your typical jet will burn anything from propane, through petrol to the remains of your chip pan without skipping a beat, or even noticing the difference. Diesels aren't far behind. The reason diesels are so tolerant is because the fuel is directly injected into the compressed air and spontaneously combusts with precise timing. In a petrol engine, the fuel is premixed and must be kept from burning until the spark comes along. It needs high octane fuel for the fuel air mixture to not be too impatient and blow before the spark. Christian. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"Jonathan@Home" wrote in message ...
I believe they are different densities and the unleaded will sit on top of the diesel like salad dressing. : Do not be tempted to add mustard... |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Andrew McKay wrote:
On that subject I find it quite amazing that the gas companies and car companies haven't seen fit to install different nozzles (say square and circular) which won't fit the other type of vehicle. And putting the diesel and regular gas alongside each other on the forecourt seems like a plain daft idea to me! Yes, and all knives should be sold with corks on the ends. -- Grunff |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
On Wed, 13 Aug 2003 10:52:15 UTC, "IMM" wrote:
"David W.E. Roberts" wrote in message ... "BillR" wrote in message ... Grunff wrote: MartinC wrote: Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). Wasn't adding a small amount of petrol to diesel a trick used in very cold weather anyway? Yes - this is a perennial problem which appears on NGs from time to time. Petrol into diesel is not usually a problem. I can't remember the percentage but I have at least one car manual which recommends mixing petrol in with diesel in cold winters to prevent waxing. And it doesn't clog the carburettor or foul the plugs :-) carburettor? In a diesel? Exactly...it can't possibly clog it up... -- Bob Eager rde at tavi.co.uk PC Server 325*4; PS/2s 9585, 8595, 9595*2, 8580*3, P70, PC/AT.. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
In normal use they definitely do mix. An old truck drivers' trick to prevent
diesel freezing (from the days before 'anti-freeze' in diesel was standard) was to put a few gallons of petrol in the diesel during cold snaps. This does work, and - I think - proves they mix. That's not to say that if you mixed the two and left them untouched for a few days they wouldn't start to separate out. I read on some 'reputable' site (AA or RAC I think) that up to 20% of petrol in diesel was quite safe. Or vice-versa, if your petrol engine would run with however much diesel you'd put in it, that was safe also. I shudder to think of the smoke it would knock out though! Davey -- "MartinC" wrote in message om... Can I expect any bad effects from adding (accidentally) approx 10% (6 litres in 60) unleaded petrol to a diesel engine car. The car appears to run OK at present. Will the two fuels have mixed. Please keep (deserved) abuse to a minimum and answers to a maximum! TIA |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Davey wrote:
That's not to say that if you mixed the two and left them untouched for a few days they wouldn't start to separate out. They wouldn't, any more than the individual fractions in diesel or petrol self separate while it sits in you tank. -- Grunff |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"Grunff" wrote
| Yes, and all knives should be sold with corks on the ends. Yes they should be, the last time I bought a big knife the pointy end had been dinged and I took it back and prodded myself with it in demonstration to the shop girl that "this isn't sharp" Owain |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"David W.E. Roberts" wrote in message
news:bhd1k2$vj578$1@ID- I can't remember the percentage but I have at least one car manual which recommends mixing petrol in with diesel in cold winters to prevent waxing. And it doesn't clog the carburettor or foul the plugs :-) Doesn't diesel compress to ignite??? Petrol on the other hand needs to be lit ... usually with a spark plug unless you live in Sauwf Landon mate ;o) a |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
On Wed, 13 Aug 2003 08:57:59 GMT, BigWallop wrote:
Every year more than 100,000 motorists put the wrong fuel in their car - petrol in diesel engines or vice versa. In these cases the car will have to be recovered to a garage and draining the tank and disposing of contaminated fuel is expensive. I guess it depends on how much petrol you put into your diesel tank. A few litres in an empty tank then filled with diesel isn't going to be a problem but a tank diesel tank filled with petrol is another story. Probably quite hard these days to fill a petrol tank with diesel as the diesel nozzle is bigger than the unleaded petrol hole. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
putting
the diesel and regular gas alongside each other on the forecourt Made worse now that some cars have a black label / logo inside the filler cap signifying unleaded. Well that was my excuse to our pool car lady when I screwed up..... |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"al" wrote in message ... "David W.E. Roberts" wrote in message news:bhd1k2$vj578$1@ID- I can't remember the percentage but I have at least one car manual which recommends mixing petrol in with diesel in cold winters to prevent waxing. And it doesn't clog the carburettor or foul the plugs :-) Doesn't diesel compress to ignite??? Yes, and as long as it still continues to do this the resultant explosion will burn off the petrol in the mix. The compression ratio used must be 'over' by some tolerance as otherwise you never get it to start (even with the pre-heaters). I am however suprised that a 10% petrol mix will still work but if others think it will then OK. Petrol on the other hand needs to be lit Which it will be by the exploding diesel. ... usually with a spark plug unless you live in Sauwf Landon mate ;o) Tim a |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"Andrew McKay" wrote in message ... On 13 Aug 2003 01:17:44 -0700, (MartinC) wrote: Please keep (deserved) abuse to a minimum and answers to a maximum! I'm pleased to hear the other responses here! Always worried me about filling up my diesel and using the wrong nozzle at the gas station! On that subject I find it quite amazing that the gas companies and car companies haven't seen fit to install different nozzles (say square and circular) which won't fit the other type of vehicle. And putting the diesel and regular gas alongside each other on the forecourt seems like a plain daft idea to me! Yes I really hated having to get in the Q for the one diesel pump behind a lot of petrol-heads who could get in any Q. But fortunately it's not like that anymore Tim Andrew Do you need a handyman service? Check out our web site at http://www.handymac.co.uk |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Getting a little off topic, but since we're banging on about cars, does
anyone know what the music is from that new Peugeot 205 add? It's been annoying me for days, sounds familiar ... very moody track?? a |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
On that subject I find it quite amazing that the gas companies and car companies haven't seen fit to install different nozzles (say square and circular) which won't fit the other type of vehicle. And putting the diesel and regular gas alongside each other on the forecourt seems like a plain daft idea to me! The smaller unleaded opening on newer cars will not accept a diesel nozzle without significant difficulties, however it's really easy to fill a diesel with unleaded! The differences in colour coding adopted by the oil companies adds to the confusion. It needs a standard colour scheme world wide. As for daft, how about calling standard unleaded 95 ron "Premium" and high octane 97 ron "Super" unleaded! Most people regard "Premium" as better than "Super" but at least the only harm you can do is waste money. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! |
Petrol in Diesel Engine [ad music]
al wrote:
Getting a little off topic, but since we're banging on about cars, does anyone know what the music is from that new Peugeot 205 add? It's been annoying me for days, sounds familiar ... very moody track?? a The 206 GTI ad with the people with creases in the back of their shirts is called 'play away from home' and the music is from the film soundtrack to '28 days later' called 'In the house - In a heartbeat' Quite dark, chilling, slightly deranged. Toby. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
On that subject I find it quite amazing that the gas companies and car
companies haven't seen fit to install different nozzles (say square and circular) which won't fit the other type of vehicle. They have. Unleaded nozzles are narrower with knobled ends. It is not possible to put a diesel nozzle into a petrol car's hole (except for ancient cars originally sold for leaded). It is possible to put petrol in a diesel, but it probably doesn't matter so much, as discusssed here... Christian. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
On considerable, I think you're right.
-- "Grunff" wrote in message ... Davey wrote: That's not to say that if you mixed the two and left them untouched for a few days they wouldn't start to separate out. They wouldn't, any more than the individual fractions in diesel or petrol self separate while it sits in you tank. -- Grunff |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"harrogate" wrote in message ... Diesel is all about torque at low revs And that's why they are good for tractors, and nothing else. and flexibility - provided you don't want to do it in microseconds! Having had diesel company cars for the last decade I had two turbo diesels and was glad to get back to a real car. you only have to go across the channel to see the truth of that!. I know. Awful isn't it. All that pollution: black soot they spew out (cacogenic) and the noise. They should be banned forthwith. --- -- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.507 / Virus Database: 304 - Release Date: 04/08/2003 |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
harrogate wrote:
"Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Anyone who regularly drives a diesel will tell you this is far from the case - it's all about laziness, not have to change gear to accelerate, not having to change gear to go around corners, being able to pull away easily on ice or snow when the petrolheads are spinning their wheels like crazy................... and so it goes on. Diesel is all about torque at low revs and flexibility - provided you don't want to do it in microseconds! Having had diesel company cars for the last decade I find it difficult to go back to driving a petrol car again - I keep having to work pedals and move the gear lever. It's only because of our stupid taxation system that puts the cost of diesel so high over here that stops diesel cars selling more - you only have to go across the channel to see the truth of that!. Ther are all sorts of diesels, and all sorts of petrol engines. Eiether can be made torquey, revvy, narrow or wide power band. Diesel is more effeiceint at part throttle mainly tgho modern injection has made petrol very good, and its also more BTU per liter in terms of energy. The engines are heavier, and tend to spew out carbon at full throtttle, where a diesel is least efficient. I think the emissions are extremely nasty, and would buy a cat diesel if I could. You pays yer money. I drive both.Ther isn't ultimately a huge amount of difference performance wise in a decent engine between them. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... harrogate wrote: "Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Anyone who regularly drives a diesel will tell you this is far from the case - it's all about laziness, not have to change gear to accelerate, not having to change gear to go around corners, being able to pull away easily on ice or snow when the petrolheads are spinning their wheels like crazy................... and so it goes on. Diesel is all about torque at low revs and flexibility - provided you don't want to do it in microseconds! Having had diesel company cars for the last decade I find it difficult to go back to driving a petrol car again - I keep having to work pedals and move the gear lever. It's only because of our stupid taxation system that puts the cost of diesel so high over here that stops diesel cars selling more - you only have to go across the channel to see the truth of that!. Ther are all sorts of diesels, and all sorts of petrol engines. Eiether can be made torquey, revvy, narrow or wide power band. Diesel is more effeiceint at part throttle A diesel does not have a throttle, it is full air all the time. --- -- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.507 / Virus Database: 304 - Release Date: 04/08/2003 |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... IMM wrote: "The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... harrogate wrote: "Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Anyone who regularly drives a diesel will tell you this is far from the case - it's all about laziness, not have to change gear to accelerate, not having to change gear to go around corners, being able to pull away easily on ice or snow when the petrolheads are spinning their wheels like crazy................... and so it goes on. Diesel is all about torque at low revs and flexibility - provided you don't want to do it in microseconds! Having had diesel company cars for the last decade I find it difficult to go back to driving a petrol car again - I keep having to work pedals and move the gear lever. It's only because of our stupid taxation system that puts the cost of diesel so high over here that stops diesel cars selling more - you only have to go across the channel to see the truth of that!. Ther are all sorts of diesels, and all sorts of petrol engines. Eiether can be made torquey, revvy, narrow or wide power band. Diesel is more effeiceint at part throttle A diesel does not have a throttle, it is full air all the time. It is conventional to refer to any speed reduction system on an IC engine as a throttle. It isn't. --- -- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.507 / Virus Database: 304 - Release Date: 04/08/2003 |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
IMM wrote:
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... harrogate wrote: "Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Anyone who regularly drives a diesel will tell you this is far from the case - it's all about laziness, not have to change gear to accelerate, not having to change gear to go around corners, being able to pull away easily on ice or snow when the petrolheads are spinning their wheels like crazy................... and so it goes on. Diesel is all about torque at low revs and flexibility - provided you don't want to do it in microseconds! Having had diesel company cars for the last decade I find it difficult to go back to driving a petrol car again - I keep having to work pedals and move the gear lever. It's only because of our stupid taxation system that puts the cost of diesel so high over here that stops diesel cars selling more - you only have to go across the channel to see the truth of that!. Ther are all sorts of diesels, and all sorts of petrol engines. Eiether can be made torquey, revvy, narrow or wide power band. Diesel is more effeiceint at part throttle A diesel does not have a throttle, it is full air all the time. It is conventional to refer to any speed reduction system on an IC engine as a throttle. --- -- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.507 / Virus Database: 304 - Release Date: 04/08/2003 |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... harrogate wrote: "Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Anyone who regularly drives a diesel will tell you this is far from the case - it's all about laziness, not have to change gear to accelerate, not having to change gear to go around corners, being able to pull away easily on ice or snow when the petrolheads are spinning their wheels like crazy................... and so it goes on. Diesel is all about torque at low revs and flexibility - provided you don't want to do it in microseconds! Having had diesel company cars for the last decade I find it difficult to go back to driving a petrol car again - I keep having to work pedals and move the gear lever. It's only because of our stupid taxation system that puts the cost of diesel so high over here that stops diesel cars selling more - you only have to go across the channel to see the truth of that!. Ther are all sorts of diesels, and all sorts of petrol engines. Eiether can be made torquey, revvy, narrow or wide power band. Diesel is more effeiceint at part throttle mainly tgho modern injection has made petrol very good, and its also more BTU per liter in terms of energy. The engines are heavier, and tend to spew out carbon at full throtttle, where a diesel is least efficient. I think the emissions are extremely nasty, and would buy a cat diesel if I could. You pays yer money. I drive both.Ther isn't ultimately a huge amount of difference performance wise in a decent engine between them. Vectra's for one have had a cat since they first came out. Think Golf's (and their siblings) do as well. -- Woody |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"Huge" wrote in message ... The Natural Philosopher writes: harrogate wrote: "Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Immediately obvious you don't know what you're talking about; Clarkson loathes diesels. And I agree with him. Filthy, noisy things. -- "The road to Paradise is through Intercourse." The uk.transport FAQ; http://www.huge.org.uk/transport/FAQ.html [email me at huge [at] huge [dot] org [dot] uk] Well Clarkson seemed quite complimentary about the new Jag diesel - and about Merc and BMW as well. I didn't actually say he likes them - I know he generally doesn't - but he ususally bases it on economy, and that is NOT what diesels are about. -- Woody |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Huge wrote:
Immediately obvious you don't know what you're talking about; Clarkson loathes diesels. And I agree with him. Filthy, noisy things. I could never figure out how the government could justify on the one hand requiring incearsingly tougher emissions standards for petrols, and on the other encouraging the use of diesel. Diesel engines are inherently dirty - ever sat behind a brand new diesel being floored? Big cloud of black smoke. -- Grunff |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
"harrogate" wrote in message ... "Huge" wrote in message ... The Natural Philosopher writes: harrogate wrote: "Doctor D." wrote in message ... They will mix just fine, and it will have no adverse effects on your car (it's a diesel, how much worse can it get anyway??). I thought this too until I actually tried one. Take a Golf 130 TDi, Megane 120 DCi or Focus 115 TDCi for a spin and eat your words! I can never understand why the (so-called) motoring journalists of this world - Clarkson and all that lot - always promote the idea that running a diesel is all about thrift and low fuel consumption. Immediately obvious you don't know what you're talking about; Clarkson loathes diesels. And I agree with him. Filthy, noisy things. -- "The road to Paradise is through Intercourse." The uk.transport FAQ; http://www.huge.org.uk/transport/FAQ.html [email me at huge [at] huge [dot] org [dot] uk] Well Clarkson seemed quite complimentary about the new Jag diesel - and about Merc and BMW as well. I didn't actually say he likes them - I know he generally doesn't - but he ususally bases it on economy, and that is NOT what diesels are about. diesels are about powering tractors. --- -- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.507 / Virus Database: 304 - Release Date: 04/08/2003 |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
Grunff wrote in message ...
STOPPPPPPPPPPPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! PETROL IN A DIESEL WILL WARP THE HEAD IF NOT BLOW THE THING AWAY ESPECIALLY SUCH A STRONG MIX. TAKE THE FUEL LINE OFF AND PUMP IT OUT WITH THE ELECTRIC PUMP OR BUY ANOTHER ELECTRIC FUEL PUMP FOR SUCH EMERGENCIES FROM A SCRAP YARD. DRAIN INTO A DRUM AND GIVE IT TO A TREE SURGEON OR SOMEONE WITH A TWO STROKE MOTOR. The AA will charge an arm and a leg for doing the above even for it's most respected members. Disposing of the fuel is the problem. You can use the fuel in a petrol engine but slip it in one gallon at a time when you fill it up. |
Petrol in Diesel Engine
IMM wrote:
And that's why they are good for tractors, and nothing else. Damn - this is worrying - I suddenly find myself in full agreement with IMM... What shall I do? ;-) Ah! I know - New Liebour is the party of (screwing) small business - ah that's better feel ok now! -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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