California
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2004
- Messages
- 16,722
- Location
- An hour north of San Francisco
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM240 Yanmar YM186D
I have 25 gallons remaining of red (offroad, untaxed) Diesel that started giving me trouble as old fuel was exhausted and this became 100% of the fuel in use.
Engines lose power unexpectedly but if I get the clutch in quick enough then they gradually come back up to rpm. I don't hear a cylinder missing. If one stalls, cranking starts it instantly. Both my 2-cylinder and 3 cylinder Yanmars act the same so its definitely the fuel.
On each tractor, I suctioned the bottom of its fuel tank to remove anything blocking the outlet fitting, then opened the line down at the injector pump input and drained the system, so the fuel in that bucket had gone through the fuel filter. Blew out the lines and replaced the fuel filters. No water found.
Drained my bucket of bad fuel through a brass mesh coffee filter (it won't go through a paper Melita filter) and filtered out a small quantity of 'wool', sludge, and a noticeable quantity of particles. These tractors are 45 years old so debris isn't surprising, that's what the fuel filters are for.
Then I made a batch of 50% filtered fuel / 50% fresh diesel. That ran fine. Until I needed to refuel, and poured in my old filtered Diesel. Back to running crummy.
Is there some way to salvage this $100 of bad fuel? What is fuel 'polishing'?
Engines lose power unexpectedly but if I get the clutch in quick enough then they gradually come back up to rpm. I don't hear a cylinder missing. If one stalls, cranking starts it instantly. Both my 2-cylinder and 3 cylinder Yanmars act the same so its definitely the fuel.
On each tractor, I suctioned the bottom of its fuel tank to remove anything blocking the outlet fitting, then opened the line down at the injector pump input and drained the system, so the fuel in that bucket had gone through the fuel filter. Blew out the lines and replaced the fuel filters. No water found.
Drained my bucket of bad fuel through a brass mesh coffee filter (it won't go through a paper Melita filter) and filtered out a small quantity of 'wool', sludge, and a noticeable quantity of particles. These tractors are 45 years old so debris isn't surprising, that's what the fuel filters are for.
Then I made a batch of 50% filtered fuel / 50% fresh diesel. That ran fine. Until I needed to refuel, and poured in my old filtered Diesel. Back to running crummy.
Is there some way to salvage this $100 of bad fuel? What is fuel 'polishing'?