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Furnace oil can i run it in my car?
by
SMOKEYDUB
on 11 Sep, 2006 18:36
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i have a chance to take away 2 45 gallon drums of furnace oil which i figure is the same as kerosene or like a mix of that and diesel. so can i or not because that would be freakin SWEET if i could. **mutters** (stupid g/f in guelph)
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#1
by
burn_your_money
on 11 Sep, 2006 19:17
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I heard you could. But I'm not 100% sure. You'd probably want a nice assortment of lubricants to add to it
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#2
by
QuickTD
on 11 Sep, 2006 20:44
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When I moved into my present home it had oil heat. With the aged equipment and all the new oil tank/furnace inspection requirements we decided to switch to gas, which just recently became available in the area. The tank was a 200 gallon unit and was 3/4 full, the furnace installer suggested that he "take it away" for $400... Like hell! I burned to whole 150 gallons in my car, no additives and no problems.
In some cases furnace oil is the same product as #2 diesel. The dye package is added at the terminal. Sometimes heating oil contains more sulfer than on road diesel, depends on the supplier and the time of year that it's purchased, in the winter it is more likely to be high sulfer, when the quantity is high enough to justify a seperate product. Heating oil purchased in the summer is likely to be #2 diesel. I wouldn't worry about lubricity and cetane, it'll be fine.
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#3
by
SMOKEYDUB
on 11 Sep, 2006 21:29
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NICE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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#4
by
LeeG
on 12 Sep, 2006 02:15
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In most smaller towns, the distributor will only have 1 bulk tank for #2 and they add dye as needed. Larger places may have mulitple tanks, but even so I wouldnt worry about burning it.
There are issues with old diesel having bacteria or something in it. Don't know much about it, but it supposedly happens to old boats sitting around too much.
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#5
by
MacGyver
on 12 Sep, 2006 16:59
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I...err, I mean a friend of mine
ran lots of furnace oil through his TDI in the past. Coincidentally, a 97 like mine :wink:
Anyway...use your favourite additive or 2 cycle oil if you like, but in Ontario it's typically same as dyed farm/off-road fuel anyway as the guys above mention. Keep in mind how sophisticated & expensive farm equipment has gotten, if it'll run that it'll run our cars fine.
Never witnessed a problem with fuel sitting in a tank up to a couple yrs, and one free batch of ~50gal was from an old tank removal, fuel was probably 10yrs old :shock:
It actually ran GREAT, more power & smoke than usual, may have been high sulfer, but...plugged a filter with crap. So if you have any doubts to the fuel's cleanliness, prefilter before adding to your car at least...and enjoy
PS I've come to the conclusion in recent years that few women are worth travelling very far for even in a diesel, but I digress...YMMV...LMAO
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#6
by
SMOKEYDUB
on 12 Sep, 2006 18:11
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Im 20 yrs old i need some lovin
shes worht it ( well atleast she is for now) I have been dating her for 5 yrs so i have no choice :?
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#7
by
stewardc
on 13 Sep, 2006 08:10
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Diesel fuel and furnace oul are the same thing exactly. I knew a guy with a Rabbit diesel once who had over 400,000km on it and had never stopped at a gas station in its life(except in an emergency, of course). His wood-heated home had a 200 gallon oil tank which was filled on automatic delivery home heating.
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#8
by
duffer
on 13 Sep, 2006 13:20
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What happens if you get caught, by the
powers that be, using furnace oil?
Is there a hefty fine, or something?
I read somewhere that, in the U.S., if
you're caught using furnace oil or farm
diesel, there's a $20,000 fine.
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#9
by
stewardc
on 13 Sep, 2006 14:07
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That can be true, but look at experience. I've driven over 2.5 million kilometers in diesel VWs and never been checked.
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#10
by
RabbitJockey
on 13 Sep, 2006 22:17
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that's what i'm saying, whos gonna check, i know loads of big truck guys that have a tank in the bend of there truck full of heating oil with a nozzle on it so they can run it in there trucks haha, crazy bastards. i have never heard of anyone getting checked for heating oil, and who really cares anyway haha. i don't think it's anyones business what color your fuel is :roll:
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#11
by
coke
on 13 Sep, 2006 23:02
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I've never been checked. Supposidly, they check the color of the material in the filter to see if its pink, representing the use of dyed fuel. However, I have heard of people on the forums getting pulled over and checked. I guess you could argue you use ATF with every tank though?
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#12
by
Jetta Fan
on 13 Oct, 2006 08:42
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I was wondering this same thing myself and glad I did a search on it.
Cash and carry furnace oil is becoming very popular around here (meaning you can buy it at the pumps like diesel and gas) which makes getting it very easy. And with the current price of diesel (around 92 cents per litre today) and that of furnace oil (around 74 cents per litre) it's more economical. I might not be able to fill up at the pumps, but I can fill a few jerry cans and then top up in my own yard (this is how I buy all my firnace oil....cheaper than home delivery and I drive by a station every day).
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#13
by
macsdub
on 13 Oct, 2006 11:36
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my parents just got the home heating oil tank filled and the bill says right on it
"no.2 diesel fuel"
it just has dye in it,at least here in upstate ny
i got 500 gallons from work once of off road fuel
i tried my darndest to burn it up in less than a year in my old caddy
it ran fine
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#14
by
macsdub
on 15 Oct, 2006 11:38
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regarding my post above
if its really diesel fuel with dye in it
can this "off road fuel" be safely run in my dads 03 tdi golf???
can off road fuel be used in a tdi??im just worried about the cat+emissions equipment