Diesel fuel storage and delivery

   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #11  
I bought a 55 gal container and electric pump (Fill Rite). I made a pallet to put it on and I use my tractor to load it in the back of the pickup. When I need fuel, I use my pallet forks on the FEL and put it in the truck. I use a gas app to find the cheapest diesel within 3-4 miles and fill it up. Once back home, I unload it with the tractor and put the container/pallet on a dolly with rollers and roll it out of the way. I go through about 50 gal a month. It wasn't cheap, but this method works good for me and keeps my fuel fresh. It is surely better than filling and lifting 10 yellow fuel cans.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #12  
When I got my first tractor, I found some used 100 gallon tanks with 12VDC 15 GPM pumps for $350 each. I got one for me and one for my B-I-L. I put steel caster wheels on mine so I can roll it around. The local bulk distributor would bring 150 gal min without a service charge. Later he went up to 200 gallons so I got one of the plastic TOTE Tanks from a local chemical company (no charge for the tank and lets you have all you want). We fill our 2 tanks and tractors if needed and I take whatever is left into my 275 bulk tank. The driver bills us separately and no deliver charge since my brother-in-law is just 300 feet from me.
I use my fuel out of the 100 gallon tank, then remove the pump and put it in the 275 TOTE TANK and top the 100 gallon back up. It is easier to do that than try to plumb in the big tank and I can still roll my 100 gallon around if needed. I stocked up with fuel back when it fell below $3 a gallon at the pumps. I think I paid $2.68 per gallon. Wish I had held off longer now, but then who knew it would come down to close to $2 at the pumps.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #13  
I bought a 55 gal container and electric pump (Fill Rite). I made a pallet to put it on and I use my tractor to load it in the back of the pickup. When I need fuel, I use my pallet forks on the FEL and put it in the truck. I use a gas app to find the cheapest diesel within 3-4 miles and fill it up. Once back home, I unload it with the tractor and put the container/pallet on a dolly with rollers and roll it out of the way. I go through about 50 gal a month. It wasn't cheap, but this method works good for me and keeps my fuel fresh. It is surely better than filling and lifting 10 yellow fuel cans.

Pretty much the same thing I did for a few years, but got tiered of having to load and unload the tank. I had a small trailer setting around so mounted my diesel tank and a 50 gallon gas tank in it. Now when I start getting low in either tank , I just hook up the trailer on my way to town and top them both off. Only problem with that is now if I take the tractor someplace to do work I can't set my tank in my truck or on the trailer to take with me.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #14  
I use 165 gallon tank on the ground with a crank handle. The non-road diesel is the same as home heating oil around here. Theoretically, it should be cheaper (it has no 50 cent a gallon road tax) than the road diesel you purchase at the pump. In reality, it's only about a dime a gallon cheaper.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #15  
I started with a 55 gallon drum strapped to a pallet with a manual pump. Would fork it onto the truck & run to the gas station down the road to fill it with off-road diesel. Then fork it back off into the barn.

Upgraded to a 300 gallon tank on a stand in the shop & delivery. 250 gallons (what you can safely put in a 300) will probably last me a year or 2, but I wanted a stash to have in case of emergency. Also bought when it was cheaper last fall.

If you get a lot, get it in the winter so it's a winter blend & won't gell. Even so I put some biocide in to prevent slime growing & some Pri-D as a preservative.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #16  
We have lots of rules here so options are limited...

The 360 gallon tank at work is limited to 180 gallons because it is required to be double containment tank with a monitored alarm sensor should any fuel make it into the secondary tank...

Jobber has a 100 gallon minimum fuel delivery requirement plus $50 for RED and the price per gallon works out to a few cents more than what I can buy it for at a station.

At the ranch we are not allowed any type of gravity set up... fuel is in 55 gallon drums with a hand crank and the drums must be stored on a containment pallet large enough to contain the contents should a drum leak.

Some of the other ranchers have 100 gallon AUX bed mounted tanks in their pickup beds... they can fuel anywhere and even fuel their diesel pickups...
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #17  
I use a 150 gallon tank in small trailer. We have station about 5 miles away who sells off road diesel. I would not want diesel fuel to sit for the months you are talking about I think. One point I just filled my tank at about 100 gallons to prevent it getting old and I use the most in the spring doing my small crop prep and planting but off road here was $2.09 a gallon with was .17 cents less than on road. Last time I heard the price of home heating oil here it was higher than off road fuel was. Made me wonder about the dealer she bought from.

I use a rotary hand pump and it works fine for me. Issue is not running over the tractor when filling it as you can not hear the fuel backing up as you are not at the nozzle. But I have no issue with needing power.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #18  
Over 114 gallons or so if I recall right requires hazmat stuff. So you don't see any truck tanks over that.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #19  
My fuel distributor brought me a 1,000 gallon tank free of charge. When t gets empty I call and they come fill it up. Depending on how busy we are it normally lasts 1-2 months.
 
   / Diesel fuel storage and delivery #20  
Over 114 gallons or so if I recall right requires hazmat stuff. So you don't see any truck tanks over that.

If you are not in commerce, then the DOT regulations for hazardous materials transportation do not apply. So, if you live in a state where the haz-mat transportation law is 49CFR IBR, and if you are not in commerce, to mean that you are purchasing and transporting fuel for your own private, personal use, then you are free to go out and purchase a tank trailer and haul 8,000 gallons if you want, no CDL, no placards, no DOT number, no HMSP, no HM insurance.

Check your state regulations to see if your state is 49CFR IBR or if you have state specific regulations.

If you are in commerce, you are allowed to carry up to 119 gallons of diesel fuel without if being classified as hazardous. Over 119 gallons means haz-mat transportation.
 

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