91 octane Non ethanol gasoline is very difficult to come by up here and from what I understand it comes out of Canada the places that carry this fuel in my area run out of it very quickly and now they say they can't get more until spring people stock up when they can get it and it's almost 5.00 a gallon.
If we had the option to get non ethanol at the pump right next to the 10% it would sell like crazy people hate ethanol gas up here it causes us lots of unnecessary grief with all our non automotive engines and the storage supplements these ethanol blends requires are not cheap. Wish all the politics didn't drive these foolish things all we want is good gas that doesn't go bad in two months. Now the are trying to ruin the good old reliable diesel engine next.
We have a bunch of new plow trucks here and in the middle of a blizzard we are trying to fight we have to pull over and regen for 15 to 30 minutes and sit there at high idle not accomplishing anything.I here it all the time on the radio I have to stop and regen this is the dumbest thing i've ever seen. I don't understand why every state has different ethanol rules very confusing. I'm all for supporting the farmer if we all stopped using ethanol tomorrow would it really even hurt any of them???
Don't think they put ethanol in Diesel fuel.
Here is what a fleet maintenance facility has to say about regeneration.
"The regeneration process occurs at road speeds higher than can generally be attained on city streets; vehicles driven exclusively at low speeds in urban traffic can require periodic trips at higher speeds to clean out the DPF.[5] If the driver ignores the warning light and waits too long to operate the vehicle above 40 miles per hour (64 km/h), the DPF may not regenerate properly, and continued operation past that point may spoil the DPF completely so it must be replaced.[6] Some newer diesel engines, namely those installed in combination vehicles, can also perform what is called a Parked Regeneration, where the engine increases RPM to around 1400 while parked, to increase the temperature of the exhaust."