al3
Silver Member
Wanted to ask this before all the warm weather makes Jan a pleasant memory….
Any first hand experience with blended Bio D and real cold weather? We saw 45 below air temps on more than a few days this winter. It usually warmed up to 5 below or so before I had to go out and remove snow. My garage is unheated, so it’s likely that the fuel will be pretty close to the air temp.
I just converted from gas to diesel. Stopped at local fuel distributor (NE Minn) today who informed me they’ll be switching to a blended bio mix this “summer”. When I asked him the question about –45 cold soaking, didn’t have an answer.
I went back and read the past posts on the subject, and noticed that a lot of the folks using bio said they didn’t use it when cold. Also followed the links to the Bio site, read the info on blended, particularly the part about higher gelling points………
Anyone successfully using the blended stuff way below zero? If so, what was your additive mix and how cold did it go? Tks.
Any first hand experience with blended Bio D and real cold weather? We saw 45 below air temps on more than a few days this winter. It usually warmed up to 5 below or so before I had to go out and remove snow. My garage is unheated, so it’s likely that the fuel will be pretty close to the air temp.
I just converted from gas to diesel. Stopped at local fuel distributor (NE Minn) today who informed me they’ll be switching to a blended bio mix this “summer”. When I asked him the question about –45 cold soaking, didn’t have an answer.
I went back and read the past posts on the subject, and noticed that a lot of the folks using bio said they didn’t use it when cold. Also followed the links to the Bio site, read the info on blended, particularly the part about higher gelling points………
Anyone successfully using the blended stuff way below zero? If so, what was your additive mix and how cold did it go? Tks.