Note that SVO/WVO is only doable in moderate to warm climates. If you have to deal with sub -10C temperatures : forget it, your tank will turn to jelly and no amount of preheating in the engine bay will help. The best you can do in such climates is a VO/diesel mixture, WITH preheating and perhaps still starting on straight diesel.
I am well aware of the limitations of SVO in the cold That is why I was questioning using it since I'm in Canada and it gets pretty darn chilly here!
hey,where do you guys get your lye and methanol from. i cant find places that sell it aound here(i havent really looked that hard tho)thanks for all the info so farMark
Missing the "partially" option! Also you could do separate Biodiesel and SVO options to get more from this poll.Am running on 25% SVO at the moment, have tried up to an estimated 60%. Weather is getting too cold for such experiments without any form of preheating, so I am working on some preheating contraption. I am definitely sticking with SVO though. Making my own biodiesel will probably be too messy and time consuming (what do I do with the glycerine residue? where do I get the required ingredients?).SVO is the cheapest option per mile, although it does require a small investment in preheating/switching equipment and possibly extra countermeasures if you have to deal with REALLY cold weather (preheating it in the engine bay does not help if the stuff turns to jelly in the tank)Marcel