rawaits
New member
what is preferable in diesel tractors? Off road diesel fuel or the kind available everywhere (at more cost)? thanks, rick
It is the same thing
I've always thought there was a difference between the on road diesel and the off road stuff?? The off road has sulfur in it, but the on road has most (if not all) sulfur removed from it? Otherwise, why have the two different grades to start with??
A JD dealer I've bought stuff from before says to use the off road because the sulfur helps to lubricate the engine better. Can anyone back that up????
It is common around here that these guys with the 100 gallon tanks in the beds of there trucks for refueling their construction tractors, fuel their trucks with it also, not real smart.
I wonder if any of these guys have tapped the equipment tanks on the bottom and routed around their truck tanks. Burn the dyed fuel from the equipment tank, and leave some regular fuel in the truck tank just in case you get dipped.![]()
I wonder if any of these guys have tapped the equipment tanks on the bottom and routed around their truck tanks. Burn the dyed fuel from the equipment tank, and leave some regular fuel in the truck tank just in case you get dipped.![]()
All gunna be the same stuff everywhere inevitably. I prefer cheaper off-road stuff because well, its cheaper!what is preferable in diesel tractors? Off road diesel fuel or the kind available everywhere (at more cost)? thanks, rick
In Calif. the difference is no road tax and it is dyed red. The actual fuel is the same as far as I know.
A JD dealer I've bought stuff from before says to use the off road because the sulfur helps to lubricate the engine better. Can anyone back that up????
Don't know this for a fact, but I was told by a guy that was busted for having red die diesel in his pick up that the fine was $1000 per gallon of capacity of the vehicle. He had 2 tanks on his truck and was able to talk the fine down to what one of the tanks would hold. 19 gallons = 19kIt is common around here that these guys with the 100 gallon tanks in the beds of there trucks for refueling their construction tractors, fuel their trucks with it also, not real smart.
Oh, and here in Calif. the savings in off road vs on road is about 30 some cents per gallon.
I've always thought there was a difference between the on road diesel and the off road stuff?? The off road has sulfur in it, but the on road has most (if not all) sulfur removed from it? Otherwise, why have the two different grades to start with??
A JD dealer I've bought stuff from before says to use the off road because the sulfur helps to lubricate the engine better. Can anyone back that up????
* true enough.The difference in price is the road taxes. They made 'em dye the off road fuel so truckers couldn't beat the taxes; *big fine to be caught on the highway w/ dyed fuel
1*It don't take a lot of fuel to justify either one of these set ups or to make them worth while nor does the supplier have to be close by..1*Unless you are using A LOT of fuel, and have a supplier close by, I wouldn't go out of my way to find untaxed fuel.. I would just buy from a supplier that has a pretty good turn over in inventory so you know the fuel is fresh.
Brian
*You should be able to do this at any station .*We have at least one local station that gives an off-road discount for diesel put into a container other than the tank of you truck if you ask for it. Last time I got diesel it was about 30 cents per gallon tax refund. Not quite as low a price as real off-road diesel, but a lot more convenient.
Best of all, it is the non-dyed on-road diesel you get, straight from the same pump as anyone else...
1* A lot of people have bought into the myth.1*I've always thought there was a difference between the on road diesel and the off road stuff??
2*The off road has sulfur in it, but the on road has most (if not all) sulfur removed from it?
Otherwise,
3*why have the two different grades to start with??
4*A JD dealer I've bought stuff from before says to use the off road because the sulfur helps to lubricate the engine better. Can anyone back that up????
1*Exactly1*It's not two different grades
2*It is possible for off road to be LSD but after the end of the year it will all be ULSD
Right on.In Calif. the difference is no road tax and it is dyed red. The actual fuel is the same as far as I know.
Who pays for your new fuel filter installing it and the tow and repair bill.It does't work. When suspected they cut your fuel filter. If it is red you are busted. If you used taxfree fuel even once change your fuel filter.
***I believe we're much much closer to that point than most folks realize.***All gunna be the same stuff everywhere inevitably. I prefer cheaper off-road stuff because well, its cheaper!![]()
This royally sucks considering it's not against the law to have red fuel in such a tank.IRS penalties (which here in VA we mirror) is $10/gal tank size with a 100 gallon minimum. So whether you have a 10 gallon tank or 99 gallon tank it will cost you $1,000 - PLUS they add the appropriate tax back onto the gallons..
They will also go back to the storage tank you pulled the fuel from (assuming it was your own bulk tank) and access for that tank capacity as well...
Brian
**More like rapidly IMHO.years back it was two different spec'd fuels..
**But now everything is slowly migrating to ULSD and the difference would be whether it was taxed (clear = no dye) OR untaxed (dyed) .
***Depending on where you live you may or may not be able to find the higher sulfur fuels, at least for the short term. Brian