Home > General > Red Diesel |
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Macdaddy Member Since: 15 Oct 2009 Location: Preston, Lancashire Posts: 466 |
Red diesel is simply diesel which has had dye mixed in to prove it's not had Vat paid.
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21st Sep 2010 7:33am |
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Fox Member Since: 02 Apr 2010 Location: Essex Posts: 2313 |
Yes, it's the same stuff.
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21st Sep 2010 7:59am |
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mzplcg Member Since: 26 May 2010 Location: Warwickshire. England. The Commonwealth. Posts: 4029 |
Although it will work fine on most diesel engines, red diesel is not of the same quality or cetane value as white. There are differences in the flash time and the amount of lubricant additives, not enough to prevent it running most engines but there IS a difference.
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21st Sep 2010 8:38am |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
4th time - Max Mosley territory? 5th time - They get medieval on your ass? |
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21st Sep 2010 9:55am |
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M44K TS Member Since: 09 Feb 2010 Location: North East U.K. Posts: 1325 |
A mate of mine used to run his daily shed, (Escort TD) on a mix of red diesel and cooking oil, had a few funny looks coming out of Costco with 2, 20l drums of oil then pouring it straight into his car It even ran quite well too, was quicker than my mates Focus TDCI company car 2006 Mercedes CLS
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21st Sep 2010 1:17pm |
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hoppy_70 Member Since: 04 Apr 2010 Location: Peoples Republic of Mancunia! Posts: 866 |
I always thought that red diesel being of lower quality was an urban legend. I'd been told it was just dyed diesel by a customs friend of mine. It makes sense to be fair, farmer giles isn't going to put crap in his £100k massey ferguson tractor......
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21st Sep 2010 9:01pm |
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Tim in Scotland Member Since: 25 Mar 2007 Location: Somewhere between here and there, if not then I'm all at sea or at home in Scotland Posts: 2181 |
Fishermen also get red diesel for their trawlers, just like my employer who gets all the fuel for his fleet of 560 ships duty and VAT free (think how much better off the treasury would be everytime we fuel up at 10,000 tonnes at a time, and the go juice we use is $550 a tonne and is thick black tar!), and airlines who don't pay duty or VAT on their fuel. 2018 Mini Countryman Cooper S E All4 PHEV in Melting Silver - it’s whisper quiet in EV and polluter modes |
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21st Sep 2010 9:57pm |
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dan_uk_1984 Member Since: 12 Nov 2008 Location: Bude, Cornwall Posts: 4014 |
I know of someone who used to run his LPG RRC on household LPG bottles in the 80's. I think there was a bigger price difference then, nowa days it's not worth the risk.
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21st Sep 2010 10:04pm |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
That thick black tar ships use has to be heated before it goes in the engine, otherwise it won't combust. Would be fun to be able to burn it though - and an engine that had a max speed of 60 rpm! |
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22nd Sep 2010 5:44am |
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mzplcg Member Since: 26 May 2010 Location: Warwickshire. England. The Commonwealth. Posts: 4029 |
Agri engines are designed to run on it. Check out some of the specs. The average 10 litre engine will output something like a paltry 140BHP which sounds awful until you read the torque figure that goes with it. And it's not the dye which remains detectable for ages, it's a chemical trace or tag which remains identifiable even after combustion, i.e. In the exhaust soot. |
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22nd Sep 2010 6:45am |
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Tim in Scotland Member Since: 25 Mar 2007 Location: Somewhere between here and there, if not then I'm all at sea or at home in Scotland Posts: 2181 |
Kurt, my ship does 94rpm flat out on it's 12 cylinder Sulzer. Fuel consumption at 28mph flat out is a problem at 460 tonnes a day though. The fuel is heated to 60c just to make it flow from the storage tanks in the hull to the fuel purification system in the engine room. I don't think we have ever tried to measure the torque - Rolls Royce never used to disclose the torque of their engines, stating that it was "sufficient" - I would say the torque of my ships engine would be described as enough! There is so much that we have to have a speed up program that above 65rpm the engine is computer controlled to speed up at 1rev every 3minutes and from 85 to 94 rpm it's 1 rev every 6minutes!
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22nd Sep 2010 7:11am |
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M44K TS Member Since: 09 Feb 2010 Location: North East U.K. Posts: 1325 |
95,000hp?
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22nd Sep 2010 4:52pm |
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Tim in Scotland Member Since: 25 Mar 2007 Location: Somewhere between here and there, if not then I'm all at sea or at home in Scotland Posts: 2181 |
They've managed to up the same model to 115,000hp now by increasing it from 12 to 14 cylinders and 4 turbos (each about 2m in diameter!). 95000hp is so last year............................. 2018 Mini Countryman Cooper S E All4 PHEV in Melting Silver - it’s whisper quiet in EV and polluter modes |
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22nd Sep 2010 5:29pm |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
Think of the throttle lag. |
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22nd Sep 2010 8:14pm |
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