Not thinking, I bought my fuel last July and this past December's continuous nights at 20 below gelled the fuel. I recovered soon enough by adding a couple gallons of kerosene to the 14 gallon tank, and a salamander pointed at the tractor for an hour or so; (also dropped the filter and added some 911).
When I called my dealer and told him what I'd done and asked for recommendations, he went all bonkers about the kerosene. He said it would score the injectors and I had to use the proper additive that had lubricant in it (which I did that day).
But it begs the question: Doesn't the Winter mixed fuel you buy have kerosene in it? Do they add the magic sauce to provide lubrication? What's in the stuff anyway?
When I called my dealer and told him what I'd done and asked for recommendations, he went all bonkers about the kerosene. He said it would score the injectors and I had to use the proper additive that had lubricant in it (which I did that day).
But it begs the question: Doesn't the Winter mixed fuel you buy have kerosene in it? Do they add the magic sauce to provide lubrication? What's in the stuff anyway?