I found one of those small fuel heaters on a Mercedes engine at the junkyard (I got it free because they didn't know what it was and I posted about it here). I think heated diesel would help, to a point, as diesel fuel doesn't do well at cold temperatures. Heated diesel might be a good idea for an older, mechanical, IDI engine operated in the winter somewhere like Colorado or the midwest U.S. but I don't think it would do much in a warm climate and may even be a bad idea as the diesel get warmed by ambient engine heat. Where did this customer live at the time?
you need to accurately heat/cool the diesel fuel. unless you can properly cool it, then forget it. the diesel should be between 145-155 degrees F. you also need to consider that the way the system works now is going make it very difficult to heat/cool the fuel properly. the diesel engine burns very little fuel to run, but flows much much more than it needs for cooling. thats where a closed loop setup comes in handy. instead, the fuel return gets dumped back into the fuel intake, and in that loop is the fuel inlet from the tank. a check valve should be added to make sure you don't get reverse flow back to the tank, but the ideal setup is to have a small pump feeding the closed loop so the pump doesn't starve of fuel. heating/cooling mere CC's of fuel is much easier to do and i've been looking for an efficient way to do it with thermoelectrics. the only problem is designing a MOSFET controller that is capable of handling 25 amps of DC power at 12-15 volts.
maybe his heated diesel just ran really well compared to the WVO he was running just prior...
Quote from: jtanguay on October 13, 2009, 09:51:22 amyou need to accurately heat/cool the diesel fuel. unless you can properly cool it, then forget it. the diesel should be between 145-155 degrees F. you also need to consider that the way the system works now is going make it very difficult to heat/cool the fuel properly. the diesel engine burns very little fuel to run, but flows much much more than it needs for cooling. thats where a closed loop setup comes in handy. instead, the fuel return gets dumped back into the fuel intake, and in that loop is the fuel inlet from the tank. a check valve should be added to make sure you don't get reverse flow back to the tank, but the ideal setup is to have a small pump feeding the closed loop so the pump doesn't starve of fuel. heating/cooling mere CC's of fuel is much easier to do and i've been looking for an efficient way to do it with thermoelectrics. the only problem is designing a MOSFET controller that is capable of handling 25 amps of DC power at 12-15 volts.I use some used motor oil for fuel so I was thinking that it would be a good idea to heat the mixture to reduce vicosity somewhat. I was intending to use a heater water valve to vary the coolant flow through the heat exchanger, and mount a temp sender on the coolant return side to monitor the temp. Shouldn't be difficult to maintain 150 degrees or so.