sandcruiser said:
Since I don't believe anything is 100% perfect in the automotive world, I'm sure someone out there has horror stories- anyone know of any that can be read about online?
Thanks
Thats a fair point. A lot of people running it are zealots who will tell you there is no downside. I did a fair amount of research before filling the tank of my $40,000 Dodge truck and was worried like you are. The best study I came across that was most applicable was one by the National Park Service who had put the same truck on 100% bio for 100,000 miles to test it out for Park use. They disassembled the motor every 10-20,000 miles and checked it for wear against a control (petro diesel) and dyno tested it each time. They found that if anything the truck on bio had less wear and less injector problems due to the higher lubricity and cetane of bio. These studies and several others by agencies like NREL are on the
www.biodiesel.org National Biodiesel Board site.
Here is my list of downsides after running it for a little over a year with three vehicles of experience. They are mostly related to having your own pump and refill set up as I dont have commercial pumps close enough to use regularly.
1. You actually have to think about your fuel source and do stuff other than show up at any gas station and fill up. (Unless you have commercial bio pumps in your area) You chave to arrange for a bulk tank to be filled, front he money for several months of fuel at a time etc.
2. You are now the owner of yoru own gas station. Cool right? sort of. While this is pretty convenient, You have to order and change pump filters, clean the tank if something gets in there, clean up spills, worry about security etc.
3. Everyone asks you about it. I actually like talking about it, but I spend a non trivial amount of time ansering all the same questions over and over.
4. Your fuel source is often not certified or coming from highly regulated and tested sources. Its coming from smaller distributors and makers and the chance of something not being right with it is higher. I giot a batch of fuel once that still had too much parafin in it and it clogged my pump filter. If I had not had that pump filter it would have clogged my vehicles filter. I had to change the pump filter several times to work through it all.
5. Spillage on your vehicles paint must be cleaned immediately as it will eventually eat the paint.
6. You may find after a while that there are some parts of you fuel system that come into cotnact with teh Bio that are not compatable i found this with teh fuel return hose on my trucks refill line. It wasnt a big problem but it was something unexpected that I had to deal with.
7. As mentioned before there is an effiency hit. It is a less energy dense fuel by about 5%, and you can see results worse than this depending on your engine and its timing, tuning etc.
8. It works less well in the cold. You need to use additives or blends if in cold temps.
9. People often say that the increase in N0x is minimal. I have seen studies that show up to a 20% increase. So while bio use really does lower the other emission gasses by huge amounts or completely negates them, N0x issue is not trivial.
Anyway thats my 2 cents ont eh down sides, there are aguments against each of these as well, but I will leave those to others. I would like to hear what you come up with.