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Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil?

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Duane(Pa)

09-16-2002 13:34:28




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I have a supply of Kero and a couple Diesel tractors. I'll be away from the computer for a couple days, so I'll check back and see what ya'll have to say about the idea.




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Thanks to Everyone

09-18-2002 15:36:09




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
At some point it dawned on me that this may be ill advised, even though the kero is free. I WILL burn it mixed with fuel oil in my furnace sans the motor oil. The guy that delivers my home heating fuel oil says that both heating oil and OFF road diesel come out of the same truck, tank, and valve. I agree that two stroke oil makes more sense in a kero mix. Thanks again, I knew there would be some on each side. I try to do things acording to hoyle, but like to save a buck where I can. Sounds like this time it's going to be on heat. Duane

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James

09-19-2002 10:27:07




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Thanks to Everyone, 09-18-2002 15:36:09  
kero is just deisel refined one step further if you can burn deisel you can burn kero your fuel man is right they probably don't bother with both.



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Ed

09-18-2002 06:01:16




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Man, I learned a lot of stuff.

Why would you want to burn expensive Kero when cheeper Diesel is all you need. In my part of the contry it's almost double the cost.

I've heard of a number of people burning No 2 fuel oil but that just makes the engine start harder. No 2 and Diesel are very simular and some suppliers are even delivering Diesel to homes in place of No 2 - the red stuff

I've also heard of people using Kero in the winter because it startes easier - heard it burns hotter also.

I've got to believe that as you move away from Diesel towards a Kero blend or No 2 bend it's tougher on the engine.

my 2 cents

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G-MAN

09-17-2002 16:25:03




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Octane is the measurement of a fuel's ability to resist igniting under compression, and is normally applied to spark-ignition type fuels, for obvious reasons. Cetane is a measurement of a fuel's ability to ignite under compression, and is applied to compression-ignition type fuels, again for obvious reasons. So if you want to get right down to the brass tacks, both are measurements of the same quality in a fuel, but on completely different ends of the scale. Both are measured using a single-cylinder, overhead-valve, variable compression ratio engine called a Cooperative Fuel Research engine. A fuel with a high cetane number is going to have a low octane number, and vice versa. Engine manufacturers generally publish requirements for the type of fuel to be used in the engine. Cetane, octane, pour-point, cloud-point, sulfur content and the like are normally part of these requirements. I think this whole discussion kind of turned away from the main question. Yes, you can probably run even straight kerosene in your diesel tractors. Maybe forever without noticing any ill effects. If you're going to be operating in ambient temps above freezing most of the time, you'll probably want to use a quality fuel additive to improve the lubricity of the fuel and protect your fuel system components. Stanadyne makes an excellent product for this. You're probably better off and cheaper in the long run to use that than to try and "make" your own diesel fuel. The operator's manuals for your tractors should give a list of acceptable fuels to use based on certain temperature ranges - most do. Regardless of the type of fuel you decide to use, make sure it is kept fresh and in good condition. Make sure it is clean and keep the fuel system properly maintained. If you have a large supply of kerosene, maybe you can sell it to someone with a specific purpose for it, and buy diesel. With the price difference, you'll even end up with some cash to spare, and you'll know you're using the proper fuel.

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bill b va

09-17-2002 15:09:00




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  

all these references to octane in gasoline and kerosene and not one mentioned the fact there is no octane in gasoline or kerosene . octane as referenced to other fuels is a rating system ( antiknock ) where they are compared to octane .



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Steve - IN

09-17-2002 19:53:41




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to bill b va, 09-17-2002 15:09:00  
Interesting what you see on here that triggers things you might suppose are long forgotten. Octane and Cetane were chemical compounds long before they became rating systems. It's been a long time since I took chemistry (which may be what this discussion is about) but here's what I remember.

Crude oil is a mixture hydrogens and carbons. The various molecules have longer or shorter chains of Carbon atoms. When you "crack", distill or refine crude, various molecule come off at different temps depending on the number of C atoms they have. A chain with just one carbon atom in it (CH4) is the lightest chain, known as methane. The first four chains -- CH4 (methane), C2H6 (ethane), C3H8 (propane) and C4H10 (butane) -- are all gases. Next comes the liquid forms, Pentane has five, hexane has six (these molecules are called napthas -- you might have an example of them called paint thinner). With 7 C's, Heptane, you get into liquid gasoline. Next an eighth one called Octane!

Pump gas is a mixture of chains with 7 to 11 C atoms per molecule. They stared with Heptane. It made a good bang, but exploded very easily when compressed. So they added some C8, Octane (hept for 7, oct for 8. Latin) and the resulting blend gasoline became easily usable in an engine when compressed (that is, it didn't explode when you didn't want it to). So, basically an 87 octane gas got its rating because it has 87 per cent of the Octane molecule and 13 per cent of the Heptane, C7 molecule (or some blend of C7 to 11 chains with the same properties when compressed).

Next is kerosene in the C12 to C15 range, followed by diesel fuel at C16 and heavier fuel oils like No. 2 at about C17. Next come the lubricating oils at C18. The C18 molecules no longer vaporize in any way at normal temperatures.

The chains up through C18H32 or so are all liquids at room temperature. Chains above C19 are all solids at room temperature.

So the question gets to be can you mix a C18 with a C12 or a C13 to duplicate the qualities of C16? Hmmm. Well, C18 doesn't vaporize well. That's a problem. Next is the kerosene mostly C12, or C13, or C14, or C15? Dunno. Is the ambient temp like Alaska, or are we in Duane's state of Pennsylvania where it was about 80 today. Does Duane's "yesterday's tractor" have an electronic control module on it to sense surge, detonation, temp, etc. and inject the proper mixture to compensate? Probably not... we are on yesterday's tractors - not today's tractors - after all; and we can guess Duane is probably not talking about his '92 Chevy truck with three microprocessors in the ECM black box. We do know that engines and people get upset about the difference betwen C7, and C8. And we do know that there are now variables of temperature which don't call for a C11 to a C15 that we'd might use when it's cold outside -- which 80 degrees isn't. Given what we do know versus what we don't know, I still think it's safer to say no, probably not the best idea you ever had, Duane. Maybe wait 'til it's the dead of winter, then burn 13 parts C14 to 85 parts C16, and leave the C18 out of the equation altogether, or at least until it's 100 outside and you have an ECM that knows what to do with it, and a pump / injector set up that won't get trashed by it.

By the way, Cetane rating comes from cetane, which is identified chemically as n-hexadecane (hexadec meaning 16), and by definition of the rating system that sprung up, is rated at 100. Added to it is heptamethyl nonane, a highly refined branch paraffin with an assigned cetane of 15. The compression ratio of the engine is varied to produce the same ignition delay period for the test fuel as the two reference blends of higher and lower quality. Like octane, just stand the scale on its head.

Steve

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jve

12-06-2006 20:47:14




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene in reply to Steve - IN, 09-17-2002 19:53:41  
can i make diesel fuel out of used motor oil,if yes,how.



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seamus close

09-03-2004 10:46:33




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene in reply to Steve - IN, 09-17-2002 19:53:41  
what is the correct ratio of kerosene to motor oil?



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Murray Dunn

09-17-2002 07:39:00




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
In U.S. Army we operated construction equipment on jet fuel which i believe to be a bit heavier than #2 diesel. Was approved by the command.



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Bus Driver

09-17-2002 12:15:49




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Murray Dunn, 09-17-2002 07:39:00  
My buddy who was in charge of the fuels lab at Minot ND AFB told me that JP4 is between kerosene and Diesel in "heaviness". Satisfactory for Diesels.



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Bob

09-17-2002 03:54:00




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
If you value your equipment like I do, then why even think to mix anything other than fuel additives in your tank. Here in Western NY the fuel companies will blend our off road farm diesel with 30% for winter use to keep from jelling on our cold winter days. My opinion, let the experts do any blending, my equipment means too much to me. Bob



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Robert in W. Mi

09-16-2002 17:37:02




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
I'm surprised at the answers below. I guess in their little world this is an "experiement", of some kind or "vooo doo"???
I've run, and seen run a lot of straight kerosene in diesels. It happens all the time in Alaska where i lived for 25 years! Some put motor oil with it, some put 2 cycle oil with it, but most added a quart or two of ATF per 50 gallons of kero. Mixing #1, #2, and kero is fairly common in all kinds of ratio's too. In the manual of my Deutz tractor, there's a chart telling you how much "gasoline" to add to #2 diesel to keep it from jelling in the winter. (i did this a time or two in my Chevy with 6.2 diesel, and with nearly 200,000 miles on it the engine has NEVER been opened) For winter use, i use to mix #2 and #1 50/50, or even 60% #1, 40% #2, and i ran many hundreds of gallons of it over the years.
Haveing said all that, i agree running a lot of kero or #1 will shorten the life of the injection pump, that's why the oil was added.
I've NEVER seen or heard of anyone haveing any problems adding the oils i mentioned above to kero, or #1, and there was thousands of gallons of it put through engines every winter.
Cummins now has a system option available, that draws the used oil out of the oil pan, and mixes it with the fuel to burn it. You have a small tank you keep full of "new" motor oil to replenish what's used, so motor oil can't be too bad for a diesel engine!
One last thing, the reason kero was run by some people up there, is, it was FREE fuel!! Some jobs had it around in bulk, and let their help have it. In the "old days", crews would dump left over fuel on the ground when they were done with jobs!!!! If you wanted to haul it home, have at it!! Lots of people did!! Also, it won't jell in the cold!
Robert

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Salmoneye

09-17-2002 04:42:19




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Robert in W. Mi, 09-16-2002 17:37:02  
Excellent post and I agree...

Most people have never been exposed to the situations that you describe, so are afraid to even think about it, let alone try it.

I have seen farmers here burn kero in their diesel tractors all my life with no adverse effects other than slightly less power. I even know a couple 'newage' farmers that are 'cracking' their own 'diesel' from everything from old fry-o-lator grease to rape seed oil.

Here in the cold Northeast, the people in the know that have Kero heaters will run 'Non-Taxable Red Diesel' as it is way cheaper than Kero. I burn the red stuff in everything from my Monitor heater to my 'Kero' lamps, lanterns and wick heaters, with no more trouble than a tad more sooting. I have to laugh every time I see someone filling a 5 gallon Kerosun can at the Kero pump and paying through the nose...

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Red Dave

09-17-2002 05:58:17




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Salmoneye, 09-17-2002 04:42:19  
Cutting diesel with kerosene so it will flow in the winter is common in my neck of the woods.



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RayP(MI)

09-16-2002 17:15:30




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Have used kerosene and mixed kerosene/diesel in my diesel truck, especially in cold weather when gelling or flaking is a problem - with no problems. You can probably use whatever proportions of kerosene and diesel that you deem appropriate. Many municipal bus lines used to burn used motor oil in their diesel engines. That's probably why so many busses smoked so much! Don't know if they mixed it or ran it straight. Don't recommend this, but they got away with it for years. Probably had to replace fuel filters very frequently, too!

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G Taylor

09-16-2002 17:14:39




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
4 stroke motor oil is not an ashless product like 2 stroke oil. The soot and metalic anti wear compounds will crud up the engine if burned at high concentrations. Just look at engine with worn rings and the mess the ports/valves are in. As previously mentioned kerosene and 2 stroke oil os fine if you are bent upon using the products.



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kjm

09-16-2002 16:57:18




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Most road tractors [18 wheelers] run #1 when it gets around 10-15 deg. Less power, bad milage but they keep running. Kerosene is a cleaner #1



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Bus Driver

09-16-2002 16:10:01




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
The use of motor oil is not recommended as the additives in it WHEN BURNED burned may yield products that are not good for the cylinder walls or rings. But on the other hand, Caterpillar has a program for burning used motor oil in their construction equipment mixed with lots of Diesel fuel-do not attempt this except exactly per Caterpillar instructions. The engine itself will run fine on Kerosene without additives- the power output will be slightly reduced as the kerosene has fewer BTU per gallon than does the Diesel fuel. My concern is that the kerosene may not have enough lubricating ability to protect the injector pump. Add 2 cycle oil for 100-to-1 ratio with the kerosene and all should be very well. Octane is not a consideration in a Diesel engine, the cetane rating is the important factor. The OCTANE rating of kerosene and Diesel fuel is not enough different to be important for any application. If the kerosene is already purchased and no other use for it is at hand, it makes sense to use it rather than buying more fuel. I realize that this post offers a very different opinion than do some of the others. Duane will need to decide which information is correct.

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G-MAN

09-17-2002 16:00:25




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Bus Driver, 09-16-2002 16:10:01  
You're correct about Caterpillar, and a few years back Cummins came up with a system to extend the drain interval of oil in over-the-road trucks. It involves a system that meters a small amount of engine oil into the fuel system to be burned with the fuel, while a make-up tank keeps metering in clean engine oil to replace it. The constant influx of clean oil keeps the oil clean and reduces contaminants enough to allow the oil to run for much longer periods of times between drains.

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Steve - IN

09-16-2002 14:55:56




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Duane,

I agree with Jim. It doesn't make sense.

Tractors made to run on kerosene have 4 or 5 to 1 compression ratios. Your Diesel runs something like a 20:1 compression ratio. Kerosene has very low octane, Diesel fuel very high octane -- that is, fuel is hard to ignite while kerosene is volatile stuff.

Mixing the stuff with oil to raise the octane is probably a black art that shouldn't try without some kind of chemistry degree under your belt.

So unless you really want to see your motor act like a hand grenade I wouldn't do it. Go buy some M-180's and set them off in the field. The bang may be about the same, it's a lot cheaper, and you won't have to clean up all the shrapnel afterwards. Seeing if you can trade the kerosene you have to some guy who runs an all fuel tractor and is willing to pump you some heating oil from his furnace in return would be my druthers.

Steve

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09-18-2002 23:09:23




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Steve - IN, 09-16-2002 14:55:56  



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moonlite

09-17-2002 11:48:08




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Steve - IN, 09-16-2002 14:55:56  
You have watched too many movies. I saw a movie where a fellow put GASOLINE in a John Deere M DIESEl and next picture showed a styled A flying apart in flames.



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moonlite

09-17-2002 11:46:47




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Steve - IN, 09-16-2002 14:55:56  
You have watched too many movies. I saw a movie where a fellow put GASOLINE in a John Deere M DIESEl and next picture showed a styled A flying apart in flames.



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Frank M.

09-17-2002 16:52:49




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to moonlite, 09-17-2002 11:46:47  
Hmmm.... A John Deere M Diesel? I wonder where thay found such a critter.



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Steve - IN

09-17-2002 12:51:31




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to moonlite, 09-17-2002 11:46:47  
Never saw that movie, moonlight.

But I have seen it happen in reality. Low octane gas in about a 11:1 compression ratio gas engine on an oval track. Preigntion cracked the head, warped then broke the OHC, valves got loose and shrapnel themselves. Opened up the water jacket and instant steam bath behind the car. No flame, not as spectacular as your movie. Guy was garaged next to me, and he'd flushed about a $5,000 engine because of trying to save some bucks and using octane booster instead of ponying up the money for high octane gas. Pretty stupid.
Not pretty to look at either.

Actually! I remember seeing a more spectacular version. Fuel dragster. Too much need for speed -- too rich on the nitromethane (and these were guys who'd been brewing that stuff for a lot of years). Head came right off the engine. Mucho flames! Spectacular to see it happen -- sad to see all those expensive engine parts turn to junk.

Steve

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know your facts before spreading them

09-17-2002 10:45:54




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Steve - IN, 09-16-2002 14:55:56  
Kerosene is NOT volatile. Kero tractors had manifold heating systems to heat the kero/air mix enough so that it would ignite when sparked.

Octane has NOTHING to do with a diesel engine.



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G-MAN

09-17-2002 15:56:29




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to know your facts before spreading them, 09-17-2002 10:45:54  
Steve is right. I am sure that I have read that the ignitable temperature range of kerosene exceeds even that of gasoline, so I will look for the data for sure. If you want to get technical, cetane is the measure of a fuels ability to ignite under compression, while octane is the measure of a fuel's ability to RESIST igniting under compression, so they are both basically measurements of the same thing, but at opposite ends of the scale. If you doubt that kerosene is volatile, you might want to talk to the family of one of the many people that have been killed in kerosene explosions while fueling an old tractor with it still hot. Any petroleum product is volatile, it all depends on the conditions at which that volatility is reached.

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Steve - IN

09-17-2002 12:34:23




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 Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to know your facts before spreading them, 09-17-2002 10:45:54  
Might ask the same of you -- whoever you may be.

Here are some facts:

The energy content of petroleum fuels: No.1, No. 2 and gasoline is fairly constant per unit of mass. The density of these fuels differs greatly however. Therefore it is easier to keep less dense gasoline in suspension with air than it is kerosene. The reason for intake manifold heating on all fuel tractors is that the greater density of kerosene means a greater propensity to condense - or fall out of suspension with air - in the manifold. Heat raises its effective "dew point" as do vortex or "swirl" generators in the passage and on the intake valve. Don't take my word for it, read the discussion of fuels from Oak Ridge National Labs -- >Link

Fact:>Link All fuel - kerosene burning - tractors have lower compression ratios than gas tractors. See any spec listing. If kerosene isn't more volatile - that is, has a greater propensity to burn more rapidly - than gasoline then were the tractor designers stupid, or did they know something about the relative octane or cetane properties of gasoline versus kerosene?

Fact: Kerosene and Diesel are rated in cetane. Gas is rated in octane. Cetane rating is a measure of combustion speed characteristics of a fuel in a compression ignition engine. Octane is a measure of the combustion speed characteristics of fuel in a spark ignition engine. Two different words. Two different scales. Exactly the same concept. To say octane has NOTHING to do with the idea is equivalent to saying that 40 degrees Centigrade doesn't mean it's hot outside.

Fact: The delay between the time the fuel is injected into a Diesel cylinder and ignition is expressed as a cetane number. Usually, this is between 30 and 60. Fuels that ignite rapidly have high cetane ratings, while slow-to-ignite fuels have lower cetane ratings (sounds a lot like the octane idea, yes?). The lower the temperature of the ambient air, the greater the need for a fuel with a higher cetane number.

Fact: Diesel fuel has a cetane rating of about 40. Most kerosene ranges towards the 50 - 60 end of the scale. They are very different. Ether, with a very high cetane rating of 85-96, is often used for starting diesel engines in cold weather. If the volatility of the fuel makes little difference -- mix in some ether as well? No, because:

Fact: any fuel that ignites before or after it should in any engine -- gas or Diesel -- can damage the engine. Preignition or detonation -- pistons don't like to be pushed when they're not ready for it.

So the original question was mixing kerosene with motor oil. I still say don't do it. I'd tell you not to use 80 octane gas mixed with 104 octane booster in a 10.5:1 gas engine as well because I've seen it shrapnel an expensive engine. Getting stuff blended right before it goes in the tank isn't easy. Multi weight oil with expanding polymers or even single weight oil is even more difficult to blend with a less dense fluid like kerosene. Mixing kerosene with No. 2 in cold weather -- OK. Do it varying ratios depending on the temperature -- but No. 2 is a lot more similar to kerosene in terms of density than motor oil.

Here's one last fact: I've been around long enough and seen enough engines explode to err on the side of caution at times and not to advise somebody to put some witch's brew in their engine and hope for the best -- the worst being a few thousand dollars out the window to save a few cents on fuel.

Steve

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Bus Driver

09-18-2002 05:41:09




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Steve - IN, 09-17-2002 12:34:23  
Webster definition of "volatile": "evaporating rapidly or easily at ordinary temperatures." The kerosene explosions observed have been only when the kerosene was spilled on a hot surface. So by this definition, kerosene is not volatile. Gasoline is very volatile and consequently has a low flash point. Kerosene has a much higher flash point. Again I say that Duane has an interesting decision making process in store with respect to his question.

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Steve - IN

09-18-2002 14:51:38




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Bus Driver, 09-18-2002 05:41:09  
Bus Driver,

Yup. Duane is gonna run into a fine mess when he comes back and reads all this.

The flash point of gasoline is 40 degrees below zero. None of us should ever go near it. Flash point involves introducing a flame or spark to ignite a liquid. The flash point of Jet A kerosene, a C12 and C13 fuel, gets down to 29 degrees (wouldn't want your airplane at 40,000 feet not igniting fuel, would you?) which is still colder than most summer days in the field. (A Cal Tech guy wrote a lengthy paper about this stuff, it's at caltech.edu)

Maybe the term autoignition - or that temperature at which a fuel will spontaneously ignite without an external ignition source like a flame or spark is more useful here. It's about 495 F for pump gas, about 519F for Jet A kerosene C12H26 and about 600F for C16H36 - Diesel fuel.

The fewer Carbon molecules in a fuel, the lighter it is and the faster it evaporates (mixes with air) or vaporizes - volatility. Of the liquid fuels, Gas is lightest, followed by kerosene, followed by Diesel. And motor oil is heavier than any of them. That's why you can run gas and kero thru a carb, but Diesel needs to be injected. We were comparing Diesel to Kero to motor oil -- so I'm stickin' by my story.

you have a good day.

Steve

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big fred

09-16-2002 14:46:42




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Yup, but you'll need a refinery. That catalytic cracking process can make just about anything out of anything, that's why they don't end up with "distillate" anymore.



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JD70Jim

09-16-2002 14:14:59




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 Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to Duane(Pa), 09-16-2002 13:34:28  
Lets see now, pump diesel @ $1.499/ gal (In Iowa the red dyed, non tax diesel is 46 cents/gal cheaper) and Kerosene , which runs $175/gal which you want to mix with motor oil, which runs from $0.98/qt to $2.49/qt for the better grades on non synthetic oil. It looks as if your diesel substitute wil cost considerably MORE than real diesel costs. You'll STILL have a mixture of Kerosen and oil, not diesel. The "Product" is not really an "average" product. Mixing a quantity of 9-carbon molecules with a smaller quantity of 25 carbon molecules will not yield a product which is mostly 10 or 12 carbon molecules.

(I am not really sure about the actual chemestry of kerosene, diesel and motor oil, so my "illustrations" are really guesses, but I think my concept is sound)

Finally, if your diesel engine will run on your mixture, it is also likely that it might also run on straight kerosen or even straight motor oil! Why would you want to abuse your engine with this sort of experiment?

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moonlite

09-16-2002 15:42:59




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 Re: Re: Can I make Diesel fuel out of Kerosene and Motor Oil? in reply to JD70Jim, 09-16-2002 14:14:59  
The Mercedes Benz diesel car would run well on kerosene and was recommended by the manufacturer. One one occasion I was away from a diesel station and purchased a gallon of kerosene to get me to a station. Engine seemed to run better. the kerpsene tractors were spark ignition and the diesels ignite by compression.



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