Two-stroke Oil, Stanadyne Lubricity Formula, Non-Synthetic ATF, Marvel Mystery Oil. The usual suspects.



Todays diesel is not as "oily" as it used to be when this stuff was designed. Current Diesel is very 'dry'
Adding a bit of lube to the fuel really helps restore the lubricity to make parts that are in constant moving contact last a lot longer, and operate efficiently.
For example, the needle in a injector nozzle has about a millionth of an inch of clearance. You want that clearance to be well lubricated. The same is true with the pumping Head and Rotor in a rotary pump, and Element (Plunger and Barrel) assembly in an Inline pump.
Excellent topic!
Same problem with the diesel fuel in Europe, it is designed for modern common rail engines that need less viscous fuel in order to be able to pulverise it in smaller drops. But for older engines this results in less injection pressure, so actually the modern diesel fuel is worst for older engines.
I always add 1/2 litre of two-stroke oil in a full tank.
Moreover, as the diesel fuel price is sometimes higher than sunflower oil price, during summer time I am using sunflower oil for fuel. But only when the outside temperature is at least 25*C (80*F?), otherwise the sunflower oil leaves wax residues inside the fuel lines.
L.E. A bit of a narrative story, but it's related to the thread:
About 5 years ago I had the chance to make a direct and immediate comparison of the "old" and "new" fuel. How was that possible? With a group of friends made a trip in Tunisia, to visit the places where original George's Lucas Star Wars was filmed and of course try our rigs in the Saharan dunes. We were all in all 7 vehicles.
We drove to Genova in Italy, filling diesel from the gas stations on the way. At that time the diesel in Europe was at it's most expensive level, in Italy 1 litre was 2 EURO



I don't know how, but during one of our stops in Slovenia, somebody launched a rumour that the diesel in Tunisia is terrible and we shall be very careful about where we fill up our tanks. Before embarking on the ferry at Genova I spent 100 EUR to fill up 50 litres of diesel. My wallet and I were so traumatised about this, I still remember that 5 years later...



Anyway, 27 hours after embarking, we landed in Tunis and drove south towards Sfax. The Star Wars set was nearby a city called Tataouine, by the way. Does this ring a bell for any of the Star Wars old school fans?
At some moment we had to refill our tanks, so we looked for the cleanest and newest Shell gas station we were able to spot and filled our tanks there. We spent here the equivalent of 0,55 EURO / litre, so we felt like the bear at the hive.
About 20 km after leaving that Shell, on our CB's started a conversation about if anyone noticed a significant improvement of their engine performance and how good this Shell diesel was. This was for real, our cars were doing much better with the Tunisian diesel. Engines were running smoother and in deed more powerful. At that time I had a 1995 KZJ78, so the 1KZ-TE 3.0 litre turbodiesel engine. Next day we refilled our tanks in a local gas station. As a result, our engines were doing even better. Actually the best performances I've had with my TOY, was with diesel smuggled from Lybia, that we bought for the equivalent of 0,30 EUR / litre, in the desert, from some nomads...

This fuel was in deed more "oily" and smelled very different from the diesel fuel we have in Europe. I remember it smelled the same behind the bus I took for school in the early 90's. Something more like heating oil rather than modern diesel fuel.
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