Robby and Bren
Member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2009
- Messages
- 9
No need to buy obscenely overpriced kerosene for that. Number 1 heating oil is already lighter than*#2 diesel*and if you are in the south your heating oil is just high sulfur diesel fuel anyway.BornSailor2 wrote:
*I purchase 500 gals a delivery so what I do is add a gal of kerosene to thin the fuel out.*
Kerosene is kerosene. sometimes jet fuel is kerosene, sometimes home heating oil is #1 diesel, sometimes it is #2* diesel. Sometimes Stove Oil is jet fuel, sometimes it is kerosene. Soon home heating oil will be ultra low sulfur diesel, until then it might be high sulfur diesel that can't be sold as motor fuel.BornSailor2 wrote:
I believe no. 2 fuel oil is home heating.* No. 1 fuel is Kerosene.* Diesel is Diesel but most fuel oil companies add red dye to No. 2 fuel because of the tax difference.* This is the information I recieved.
BK
Fair enough for cooking but even then I would*fill a can*with Jet-A before paying outrageous prices for kerosene.*FF wrote:
*the addition of a quart of lube oil to a few gallons of kerosene will lube the kerosene enough to be used as emergency diesel.
5Gal of kero is enough for a grand cook , with oven for 6 months .
Home heating oil and diesel may come from the same refinery tank, but not necessarily. There are at least two specs that differentiate the two: lubricity and cetane rating, both of which are important for diesel use but are not necessary for home heating oil.
If you are in an area where the refinery produces and delivers the two different products, you may not get the cetane and lubricity you need for your diesel engine in home heating oil.
There probably is no way to know what you are getting, so the safest thing to do is only buy marine diesel for your engine.
David
As far as I know, it's illegal to use home heating oil in a diesel boat or car. That's why marine fuel is dyed red. I could be wrong so check it out.
Home heating oil and diesel may come from the same refinery tank, but not necessarily. There are at least two specs that differentiate the two: lubricity and cetane rating, both of which are important for diesel use but are not necessary for home heating oil.
If you are in an area where the refinery produces and delivers the two different products, you may not get the cetane and lubricity you need for your diesel engine in home heating oil.
There probably is no way to know what you are getting, so the safest thing to do is only buy marine diesel for your engine.
David
Steve
FF has passed on. Phil long gone as a contributor. My two cents worth is to forego a delivery truck of home heating oil. You’ve no idea as to what you’re getting not only fuel type but dirt and water potentially too.