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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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What is distillate?

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RobertN

07-17-2004 13:20:49




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We're having some discussion over at TBN about fuels in the letter series Farmalls.

Many tractors over the years could run gas, kerosene, or distillate. Seems common to all brands of tractors.

What is distillate? Whay does a tractor run so much cooler on it that it needs radiator shutters?




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little john

07-17-2004 16:28:01




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 Re: What is distillate? in reply to RobertN, 07-17-2004 13:20:49  
Awhile back someone posted a description of distillate on this site, and I forward a copy with all credit to that person:

What exactly is distillate?

: Distillate is simply the left over parts of crude oil after the more popular fractions have been distilled out! Hence the name.....
: : Basically, you'd take the crude oil and heat it in a still. The different hyrdocarbons in the crude mix will distill out in order of their complexity.
: : Methane (one), Butane (two), Propane (three), etc. All come out in order as gas and are sent to storage facilities at the well sites (usually). The crude oil is a mix of all of the liquid (at normal temperatures) HC chains. If you heat it up, the liquids turn into gas, with the lighter ones boiling off first, followed in succession by the heavier ones. The crude oil in the still will settle out at temperature points, which tells you what fraction is boiling off currently.
: : Now, since you want reasonably pure Gasolene, Kerosene, diesel, etc. you have a point where the liquid in the still is ramping to the next temperature point; you need to dump the output during the ramping into a different container. Once the temp. stabilizes at the next point, you switch the output to the pipes leading to the specific storage tanks (gas, kero, etc.)
: : So, when you're done with this process you have a number of tanks containing specific grades of fuels, and an extra tank containing a mixture of all of the fuels. This extra mixed fuel was referred to as distillate!
: : Now, you wonder where you can get it today? You can't! It hasn't existed since 1943! you see, the oil refining process was forever changed as a result of the Second World War!
: : A process for making a barrel of crude oil into a barrel of gasolene was needed to fuel the war effort. The distillation process was replaced by the cracking process.
: : Cracking involves a catalytic process whereby all of the HC chains in the crude are split in to single HC molecules. Then, these molecules are recombined into the required HC chains necessary to produce a specific fuel (Gasolene, Kerosene, Diesel, etc).

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Bus Driver

07-17-2004 14:36:10




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 Re: What is distillate? in reply to RobertN, 07-17-2004 13:20:49  
Spent many days in the 40's and early 50's running a two-cylinder green tractor on kerosene. Today if one wished to use other than gasoline, I think the K-1 would be the very best choice. We used as little gasoline as possible, switching in hot weather to the kerosene immediately with good results. Seemed to me that the carburetor properly adjusted for the kerosene was a bit rich for running on gasoline. Not a problem on cold starts.

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42FarmallH

07-17-2004 13:41:10




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 Re: What is distillate? in reply to RobertN, 07-17-2004 13:20:49  
The shutters are used to make the engine warm enough to fully burn the distillate. Distillate is somewhat like diesel fuel, less refined. There was also a diverter in the manifold so the exhaust gas went around the intake portion of the manifold to make the mix hot enough to vaporize. Main reason for the kerosene and distillate was because they were cheaper back in the day, heard of distillate for a nickel a gallon...

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Larry

07-17-2004 18:52:22




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 Re: Re: What is distillate? in reply to 42FarmallH, 07-17-2004 13:41:10  
My father paid 6 cents a gallon for distillate for his 1937 John Deere A. I remember on a hard pull, the tractor would ping and spew out clouds of white smoke. I think # 1 diesel would be a close substitude. Larry



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