Winter Diesel is #1 diesel and essentially kerosene. It is a drier fuel so should have some lubricating additives added. In addition it contains less paraffin wax so your mileage/power/etc will not be nearly as good as #2 diesel. I would just purchase a winter additive and add it to your #2 diesel.
I am using ulsd which doesn't have much lube anyway and also my old engine was not designed for it either but I add gray bottle PS @ double strength at the tractor when topping it off fwtw.
I am cautious about trusting "winter" additives as a do all for #2 fuel for this reason.... I have heard so many stories of trucks gelling up that suposedly had winter fuel it happens every year around here.
I personally have had farm semis gel out on the hwy and that is no fun changing fuel filters in 20 degree weather on the side of the hwy and in all the other bad weather that comes with that. #1 and #2 mix is the only for sure way as long as its mixed right and at 5 gallons a fill affording #1 #2 mix for one of these Yanmars is no biggy jmho on that. my .002
I keep meaning to do the math and add some 2 stroke at 300:1 but haven't yet. Even loggers around here have trouble starting stuff when it hits the teens. I assume not all places sell winter mix here in sc, cause each time we have a few cold days in a row I have a logger that has to change filters or either cant get something cranked. THe last hard winter we had a few years ago I had one that used 2 filters in a loader and killed the batts and still never got it going and just went home. THese guys either get fuel every day if they buy it at a station or they have huge thousand gallon tanks filled every month or two at the shop that they pull from, its not like they got caught with August's fuel in February!
I add 2 stroke at 200:1 to my diesel. Make sure it meets TC-W3 specs.
http://www.jatonkam35s.com/DeuceTechnicalManuals/Diesel_fuel_additive_test.pdf
So 1:400 TC-W3? Is that in addition to Powerservice? Maybe I should try that.I got the 2000 out today and mixed about 3/8 0f an Once to a guesstimate of 1 1/4 Gal. of Diesel today. Without a Doubt it's Quieter and Smoother with no noticeable loss of power. I believe I'm going to be running it now. :thumbsup:
I got the 2000 out today and mixed about 3/8 0f an Once to a guesstimate of 1 1/4 Gal. of Diesel today. Without a Doubt it's Quieter and Smoother with no noticeable loss of power. I believe I'm going to be running it now. :thumbsup:
So 1:400 TC-W3? Is that in addition to Powerservice? Maybe I should try that.
even in your gas truck you wont notice 200+:1 that's not enough oil to notice.
Like I said I been meaning to do it. But I will run it to a full tank, I usually add 5 gallons at the time.
Supertec 2stroke oil is been said to be pretty good stuff on the boat forum I frequent, I have always run it on all 3 of my boats I have had, one was a early 70s 25hp the others I still have, a 91 150hp and a 81 60hp. All OMC motors as that's what I like, the simplicity and reliability and I know them and can trouble shoot them pretty good now as well as fix them.
I have been using outboard 2 stroke oil for my chainsaw, and the saw doesn't seem to like it. Anyone else notice this? This leads me to the second question (which Clemsonfor may have just answered): can I put the 2 gallons of 50:1 gas/oil mixture in my truck's tank when I fill up to dilute it safely?
There is 2 stroke oil especially designed for air cooled engines...that is what you should run in your chainsaw not boat motor oil. Not sure about using the 2 stroke gas in your truck...is it really worth the risk given what mechanics charge?