RonMar
Elite Member
Diesel. It has the highest BTU content at around 140,000 BTU/GAL Propane has around 91,000 BTU/GAL, Gasoline around 115,000 BTU?GAL and Natural gas is around 1075 BTU per CU/FT.
A typical small diesel generator set will consume somewhere in the neighborhood of 1/8 gallon per KW per hour, or about 17,500 BTU worth of fuel per KW per hour. Most other gensets should be in the same neighborhood for BTU consumed, with the slight edge going to the liquid cooled engines. The diesel is a little more thermally efficient than a gasoline/propane engine, almost always liquid cooled and uses the highest BTU content fuel, so it will typically use the least ammount of fuel by volume.
A typical small diesel generator set will consume somewhere in the neighborhood of 1/8 gallon per KW per hour, or about 17,500 BTU worth of fuel per KW per hour. Most other gensets should be in the same neighborhood for BTU consumed, with the slight edge going to the liquid cooled engines. The diesel is a little more thermally efficient than a gasoline/propane engine, almost always liquid cooled and uses the highest BTU content fuel, so it will typically use the least ammount of fuel by volume.