Hi,
I'm setting up to homebrew biodiesel in a month or so.
I'm being offered a 1985 Mercedes Benz 190D in reasonably decent condition.What do I need to do touse biodiesel in it? What should I look out for?We also have an early 90'sNissan Largo with the small (2.0L?) diesel and a mid-90'sIsuzu
@sustainablelists.org
Sent: Sunday, December 11, 2005 8:06
AM
Subject: [Biofuel] Vehicles suitable for
biodiesel operation
Hi,
I'm setting up to homebrew biodiesel in a month or so.
I'm being offered a 1985 Mercedes Benz 190D in reasonably decent
condition.What do I need
:* Sunday, December 11, 2005 8:06 AM
*Subject:* [Biofuel] Vehicles suitable for biodiesel operation
Hi,
I'm setting up to homebrew biodiesel in a month or so.
I'm being offered a 1985 Mercedes Benz 190D in reasonably decent
condition. What do I need to do
@sustainablelists.org mailto:Biofuel@sustainablelists.org *Sent:* Sunday, December 11, 2005 8:06 AM
*Subject:* [Biofuel] Vehicles suitable for biodiesel operation Hi, I'm setting up to homebrew biodiesel in a month or so. I'm being offered a 1985 Mercedes Benz 190D in reasonably decent
condition
If you use diesel fuel for start up, I do not think a small
amount of glycerine would hurt, in warm weather. The diesel fuel
would act as a solvent. But in cold weather I have doubts. If
only fuel injectors were at stake, I would'nt worry. They are
very easy to take apart and/or rebuild, and only
residual
glycerin? and does the small amount left in a well reacted batch of BD a
concern (unwashed).
Thanks,
Ed
From: stephen lakios [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [biofuel] vehicles
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 13:34:06 -0700
A diesel will run
Ed, Steven et al,
T.P. bypass filters are ideal for cleaning diesel
and other similar fuels as they remove the asphaltine particles which are
the major cause of combustion soot and other contamination. I sell bypass
filters especially for this purpose. They are identical