Oil & Fuel Home heating fuel in a tractor??

   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #62  
yeah, seems the case up here north of you in ny. I try to buy from cheapest sources when i can, but its pretty close in price everywhere you go around my area.
And i`m surely not going to step over a dime to pick up a penny.

I use to come across the border into PA to get whatever i needed, but lately, PA`s prices have jumped way high, more than NY diesel fuel prices now.

PS... hows your ole black lab doin, keepin things in check for yah...??? lol
She's my love, my heart and soul. She's always my Angel

My daughter did add a second dog to the house this year, a yellow lab / red bone hound mix named Red. He's now always beside me and Angel as well. He's growing on me. He's a good little dude. 1575241673029.jpg20191108_084158.jpg
 
   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #63  
She's my love, my heart and soul. She's always my Angel

My daughter did add a second dog to the house this year, a yellow lab / red bone hound mix named Red. He's now always beside me and Angel as well. He's growing on me. He's a good little dude.View attachment 631842View attachment 631843

Awwwwww, i`m sure Angel is, Larry. Love the pics, such love & loyalty. I miss my Missie girl so much. Lost her 2yrs ago to cancer at age 7.
That`s awesome your daughter taking in another dog. I can tell she`s just as much a dog lover as you are. Congrats!

Home heating oil in a tractor... yeah sometimes people do that around here if they run out of diesel and cant wait for a delivery.
Most people here will also drain their home heating tanks and use it up in the springtime just so they can fill up fresh heating fuel just before winter hits.
 
   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #64  
A co-worker of mine, uses home heating fuel in his 7100. This can't be good. He states it is the same fuel as at the pump just a different color and 33% cheaper. What do you thinK?

Think about the only difference is pour point spec. You can get the pour point by using 0.15% of a diesel fuel additive. It's the same distillate from the refinery. The refiners just divert the lower pour point stuff to the diesel pool and the rest to heating oil.

Ralph
 
   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #65  
Around here #1 diesel is what we heat the house with AND I run the tractor on it. I have seen no problems what so ever with it and will continue to do so until I use more than 100 gallons/year, at which time I will get a tank strictly for the tractor. That tank will have #1 in it also.

The #1 is kerosene. Maybe Canadian companies use kerosene for home furnaces but I doubt it and see no reason why they would. A 50/50 mix of #2 normal home heating oil (same thing as diesel fuel) with #1 fuel oil (which is kerosene) is the typical fuel mix for cold climates for diesel machines.

I'll take your word for what you are using but I think you ought to question it and ask a few of your local fuel suppliers. I'm betting whoever you heard it from (that the home heating oil delivered is #1 rather than #2) does not know what he is talking about.


BY THE WAY... those who use home heating oil (#2) in tractors , esp. newer Tier 4 machines, need to be careful. Yes it is the same exact stuff BUT you become vulnerable to sludge, crud and impurities in the home heating oil that your furnace burner does not care about but your high tech sophisticated diesel cares a whole lot !! For starters, there is not a lot of commonality between high pressure diesel injection pumps and the flame thrower in your furnace !! So if you have occasion to transfer fuel from your heating oil tank to your tractor watch out for sludge, bottom scraping by accident,etc.

In the so-called gas war of 1974 one of my neighbors transferred fuel oil from his home heating tank to his VW diesel. Worked fine until he sucked up some crud and had to replace his VW injection pump at major costs. There are several lessons to be learned...
 
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   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #67  
The #1 is kerosene. Maybe Canadian companies use kerosene for home furnaces but I doubt it and see no reason why they would. A 50/50 mix of #2 normal home heating oil (same thing as diesel fuel) with #1 fuel oil (which is kerosene) is the typical fuel mix for cold climates for diesel machines.

I'll take your word for what you are using but I think you ought to question it and ask a few of your local fuel suppliers. I'm betting whoever you heard it from (that the home heating oil delivered is #1 rather than #2) does not know what he is talking about.


BY THE WAY... those who use home heating oil (#2) in tractors , esp. newer Tier 4 machines, need to be careful. Yes it is the same exact stuff BUT you become vulnerable to sludge, crud and impurities in the home heating oil that your furnace burner does not care about but your high tech sophisticated diesel cares a whole lot !! For starters, there is not a lot of commonality between high pressure diesel injection pumps and the flame thrower in your furnace !! So if you have occasion to transfer fuel from your heating oil tank to your tractor watch out for sludge, bottom scraping by accident,etc.

In the so-called gas war of 1974 one of my neighbors transferred fuel oil from his home heating tank to his VW diesel. Worked fine until he sucked up some crud and had to replace his VW injection pump at major costs. There are several lessons to be learned...

Here in NYS, we`ve been regulated to 15ppm since 2011 or 2012, so not much to worry about here i dont believe.
 
   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #68  
Here in NYS, we`ve been regulated to 15ppm since 2011 or 2012, so not much to worry about here i dont believe.
That is what I've been told by various people who work in the industry.
To be 100% clear, they say that (in Upstate NY) on-road diesel, off road diesel and home heating oil are all the same #2 diesel, all three come out of the same tank at the distribution depot, but off road diesel and home heating oil get red dye injected in as they go into the tank on the truck.

Aaron Z
 
   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #69  
A co-worker of mine, uses home heating fuel in his 7100. This can't be good. He states it is the same fuel as at the pump just a different color and 33% cheaper. What do you thinK?

I'm wondering if the OP really cares about how much sulfur or other changes have been made in diesel fuel over the past 16 years. His question had nothing to do with Tier 4 requirements as they were a decade away.

Perhaps if anyone is interested a new thread can be started.

I hope the OP is still not waiting for a viable answer to the original post. :D
 
   / Home heating fuel in a tractor?? #70  
That is what I've been told by various people who work in the industry.
To be 100% clear, they say that (in Upstate NY) on-road diesel, off road diesel and home heating oil are all the same #2 diesel, all three come out of the same tank at the distribution depot, but off road diesel and home heating oil get red dye injected in as they go into the tank on the truck.

Aaron Z

They only do it so that they can (tax) steel more dollars out your wallet. The Goober`ment, the route of all evil onto its own people!
 

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