MinnesotaEric
Super Member
The problem is that you need the fuel to be warm to not gel, and the engine coolant will only warm up if you can get it to run, which won't happen if your fuel is gelled.
How I envision using these with WVO would be to have a separate tank for that oil, and some kind of Y with dual ball valves at the lift pump's inlet. You'd have the engine start on #1, 2, or blended out of the diesel tank, and once the WVO was up to temp you'd switch to that which would now be heated via the exchanger. This is pretty much standard configuration for WVO systems that I've seen, although I'll admit it's been a few years since I explored the process and things might be different now.
I'll get a pic later and post both styles of the exchangers I have.
Your idea of firing up on a blend and then switching over to diesel #2 is interesting. That link to the PDF catalog is pretty extensive including the preheating engines.
My strategy (and again, I haven't puzzled out the details as I need to get the tractor back into my shop to get into it) is to use both the engine block heater in combination with the 100W Zerostart heater (PN# 3305048) I purchased which is 120V. The coiled copper wire wraps around the 1000W heater housing transferring heat into the fuel line and acting as a preheater. Even if the engine isn't super warm, the heater should get warm and heat the fuel line as a preheater, and then my Kioti already has a fuel filter heater and then through the fuel pump and into the direct injection rail. Once the engine is running and warm, the coolant heater continues to radiate heat, thereby continuing to warm my copper fuel line. I have a polyethylene gas tank and so unless I weld up a new tank, I cannot install an in tank heater that plugs in.
I have a different tractor than you do, but even well above freezing, I found out that I had a problem getting any heat into the engine running on diesel #2. As a result, I changed out the stock 160 degree bypass thermostat with a 185 degree bypass thermostat. The new stat warms up the engine faster, but I've only run it in cold temperatures and so I'm interested to find out how the new T-stat works in summer. As a precaution, I have the original T-stat and a new gasket in the cab of my tractor should the tractor try to overheat this summer. I explain the problem to my fellow Kioti NX series owners in a video.