dieselsmoke1
Platinum Member
I don't drive on pavement any more than I have to. Would not expect any legal or safety issues, I just don't like the resulting tire wear.
Doc_Bob said:0.3 hours for 40 gallons of fuel was much easier for me than moving 2 sets of 20 gallons each and then putting 20 gallons into the tractor.I used about .24 gallons of diesel fuel (guess, I use 0.8 gallons an hour in the TN70A) which is 75 cents. With two trips in a car or truck, it would have been 8 miles or at 24 mpg, about 1 dollar in fuel. Then, running the tractor on the road was a great experience![]()
!
Also, in Wisconsin, the only time you can use the shoulder is if the entire tractor can fit on the shoulder safely. The DMV, City cops made it very clear that a tractor cannot ride one set of wheels on shoulder and one set on roadway. Considered unsafe. They will ticket me if I do that.
Bob
daTeacha said:The big thing about off road fuel is the sulfur content and emissions plus the whole road tax thing.
neverenough said:I guess I look at the fuel thing differently as I make a living with my tractors. I never "need" fuel. I have an 8000 gallon tank for diesel fuel, and 2 300 gallon tanks for gasoline.
MadReferee said:Off-road dyed fuel typically has the same sulphur content as on-road fuel. However, starting September 1 this becomes a non-issue since just about every place that sells off-road fuel will be selling dyed ULSD. The high sulphur fuel oil (s5000) will be illegal to sell anywhere after the end of this year. Low sulphur diesel (s500 or LSD) may still be available in some areas for off-road usage but finding it may be difficult. Californnia will only have ULSD as all other fuels have been banned.
PineRidge said:Looks like I might be a minority here guys. Remember I'm not talking AG tractors, I'm talking CUTs, there is a big difference.
bontai_Joe said:I was thinking just because a CUT is smaller than the typical farm tractor, doesn't mean it isn't used and usefull on a farm. Remember that most farms in the 1930's dreamed of machines with over 40 HP as most were between 20 and 30 HP, typically what a CUT is today. And besides, to most non tractor-nuts if it looks like a tractor, it's a tractor, the distinction as to size is lost. . This was an interesting thread and brought back memories of better days in my youth.
PineRidge said:My question would be this If I drive to or from the station with off-road diesel already in the tank and get stopped am I subject to fine?
My guess would be yes, whatever your reasoning might be.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not a purist as I have driven my tractor to several neighbors within several miles of my home and I use off-road diesel too. Interesting conversation though.![]()