LowTech
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- Jan 23, 2012
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Thanks High Dez for pointing me to this thread.
OP - I can address several parts of this. Just a little background, I have a shuttle/metro version of that short bus (only a Ford). Mine has a diesel engine.
I also have ex military truck that for the last 10+ years I've run other than pump diesel in it.
And I'm one of the very few that do all of my alt-fueling while being nomadic.
As far as MPG, I can get 13 in my shuttle w/ it's diesel engine if I'm not climbing mtns or pulling loads. 10-12 is more common. It also is an older ('93) and could burn alt-fuels, . . . if I pulled a trailer w/ all the stuff needed on it.
Most people that do burn the "easy" one, "MoGas" (waste motor oil - WMO, and low octane gasoline) are using centrifuges, and letting them run for 48 hours some times, to clean the oil. I'm still working on how to do that while mobile. :-]
My big truck is much more forgiving and is happy if I filter the big stuff out of it.
For that truck I have 3, 50gal, fuel tanks. Two, that I pump new stuff into, and one that I filter them into and use from, . . . 150 gal of fuel.
To get it into those tanks I haul around a "transfer" pump, it move things pretty fast, enough 2" hose to be a fireman, and a way to power it. That way I don't spend a lot of time in the shops way.
I then have to spend time pumping from those tanks through two, or three, filters and into my usable tank. That's all in the 12' bed of my truck. That's not considering space for loads of extra filters, special wrenches, funnels, gloves, shop towels, oil on everything I own, etc, etc, . . .
And that's the "easy" alt-fuel, Veg Oil is hard.
So as far as I'm concerned, the ability of an engine to use alt-fuel should play no part in the deciding.
Running on alt-fuels is hard enough when you're processing in your garage, no one's going to do it while being nomadic.
OP - I can address several parts of this. Just a little background, I have a shuttle/metro version of that short bus (only a Ford). Mine has a diesel engine.
I also have ex military truck that for the last 10+ years I've run other than pump diesel in it.
And I'm one of the very few that do all of my alt-fueling while being nomadic.
As far as MPG, I can get 13 in my shuttle w/ it's diesel engine if I'm not climbing mtns or pulling loads. 10-12 is more common. It also is an older ('93) and could burn alt-fuels, . . . if I pulled a trailer w/ all the stuff needed on it.
Most people that do burn the "easy" one, "MoGas" (waste motor oil - WMO, and low octane gasoline) are using centrifuges, and letting them run for 48 hours some times, to clean the oil. I'm still working on how to do that while mobile. :-]
My big truck is much more forgiving and is happy if I filter the big stuff out of it.
For that truck I have 3, 50gal, fuel tanks. Two, that I pump new stuff into, and one that I filter them into and use from, . . . 150 gal of fuel.
To get it into those tanks I haul around a "transfer" pump, it move things pretty fast, enough 2" hose to be a fireman, and a way to power it. That way I don't spend a lot of time in the shops way.
I then have to spend time pumping from those tanks through two, or three, filters and into my usable tank. That's all in the 12' bed of my truck. That's not considering space for loads of extra filters, special wrenches, funnels, gloves, shop towels, oil on everything I own, etc, etc, . . .
And that's the "easy" alt-fuel, Veg Oil is hard.
So as far as I'm concerned, the ability of an engine to use alt-fuel should play no part in the deciding.
Running on alt-fuels is hard enough when you're processing in your garage, no one's going to do it while being nomadic.