I have heard that it is possible to put used cooking oil in the fuel tank of my patrol. Any thoughts regarding this please.
I have heard that it is possible to put used cooking oil in the fuel tank of my patrol. Any thoughts regarding this please.
A lot of work but can be done, there are few people that do make there own Biodiesel.. They head to there Fish and chip shop and get the used oils
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiesel
Last edited by Forced Offroad; 10th June 2013 at 03:49 PM.
FORCED OFFROAD
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Smally 01 (10th June 2013)
Im thinking on older style diesels yes, this is fine, but not the higher tech ones we have today.
You try it and let me know , Nah Not for me,
They tell me you can smell the buses running BIO Diesel, but whats the point ,
you have to build a seperate plant to refine the oil making it more expensive than "NORMAL" diesel.
To me a bit like buying bottled water,,,,,,,,,,,,,WHY
Last edited by threedogs; 10th June 2013 at 03:43 PM.
04 ST 3lt auto, not enough Mods to keep me happy, but getting there
Smally 01 (10th June 2013)
I have heard u can walk on water but have never been brave enough to ask any one if I can
Smally 01 (10th June 2013)
Its all for the enviroment i know but i dont want to smell like my local f/chip shop
a lot of work for very little gain but each to there own
good luck with it
Smally 01 (10th June 2013)
Workmate ran his 80 series on bio for a while. To cut to the chase, car is off the road now with a well and truly cooked engine. It began with gaskets leaking everywhere, then gradually car overheating and now it's game over. Hes not sure what happened exactly, but for whatever reason the car ran way too hot on bio and eventually just called it quits. Price was literally a couple of cents under normal diesel, so I could never understand why he done it.
The bastard made us all hungry when it was home time, and he was one of the first to leave. The fish and chips smell behind him was overwhelming. In the later stages of his engine demise, there was that much smoke behind him, the EPA people would have had a field day.
2005 TD42TI
Biodiesel is one way, but it is also possible to run an old school diesel on straight used cooking oil. We met a couple wit a pair of young kids at Yulara, they had just come across the great central road in an old yellow & purple Landcruiser (47 series I think) running on only used cooking oil. At Yulara they had been to the restaraunt there & secured more supplies of used cooking oil & were spending their evening filtering it ready to put into their tank. I'm not sure what their set up was, but I do recall them telling me that some folk who run their vehicles this way have to be very choosy about what sort of used cooking oil they use, but they didn't because they had some sort of 'pre-heating' arrangement, allowing them to use the type of oil that solidifies. It was a very labour intensive way to travel, but as they explained, better than just sitting at home.
Another couple running their 4wd on straight used cooking oil
Cuppa
Last edited by Cuppa; 10th June 2013 at 07:30 PM.
2006 4.2TDi ex-Telstra Remote area Camper. Patrol Sold after 11 years of ownership Replaced with 2006 OKA NT Expedition Truck. Cummins, Allison & lots of goodies
A Nomadic Life (Blog)
Smally 01 (10th June 2013)
Here in the UK diesel price is nearly twice the price of home brew Bio . So guess what I run lol
As said old school pre common rail generally will run fine on SVO straight veg oil. In colder climes like here :/ it can get a bit gloopy so a few litres of petrol fixes that
Does smell a bit like a chip shop but hey I'm not paying bloody duty ha ha ;-)
Emissions are virtually none too .
You'll need to be careful if your old truck has rubber pipes though as veggie can eventually rot it. This can be a problem if the pump has rubber O rings etc. Most these days are some sort of synthetic rubber so "should" good to go.
My Trol 4.2 has been running on it since I had it 3 years back , all good and "cheap as chips"
Y60 Patrol 4.2 d SWB in puke green
2" body lift, 2" pedders suspension lift, 35" Simex muds on excel 16" alloys, needs a turbo :/
Smally 01 (10th June 2013)
the older naturally aspirated diesels can handle it, not CRD or turbo versions, the ones I know use it straight
2002 3L GU Patrol, 2" lift, 33's, snorkel, dual battery, sliders, DVD, bluetooth
When I was in the uk, I had a Mitsubishi delica and I ran it on straight veg oil for around 3 years as it was half the price of diesel. I fitted electric and coolant heaters to make it thinner. The delica had a rotary injector pump, reportedly not as robust as an inline pump like the mq has, however I had no issues, even in winter. I believe the older precombustion chamber diesels are ok, but direct injection are not.
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