“Fool” seems a bit harsh, but certainly the risks may outweigh the benefits. I have some outdoor “Tiki” torches, mesquite-shrubs, winged-elm, and weeds that could benefit from kerosene or diesel, either.
Just came across something relevant to this thread. Kero is not the same thing as #1 diesel.kerosene is the same thing as #1 diesel, and is commonly used in northern/cold climates to combat jelling. the dye is only there there to show that road taxes were not paid on this fuel. you guy's are way overthinking this.
Gas man is right, you guys are REALLY overthinking this. We run kerosene, Jet A, off road diesel, or regular diesel (basically its a "whatever we got, or whatever is cheapest") in our airport tractors without any problems, What.So.Ever.kerosene is the same thing as #1 diesel, and is commonly used in northern/cold climates to combat jelling. the dye is only there there to show that road taxes were not paid on this fuel. you guy's are way overthinking this.
I grew up on an Airport, if it had spark plugs it got avgas, if it didnt it got Jet-A, sometimes if we got a load heavy on Prist, it would make the fuel truck exhaust smell like grapefruit!!! Also ran a dodge pickup with a cummins motor through collage with sump jet-A from the local airport I worked at.Gas man is right, you guys are REALLY overthinking this. We run kerosene, Jet A, off road diesel, or regular diesel (basically its a "whatever we got, or whatever is cheapest") in our airport tractors without any problems, What.So.Ever.
And then there are the new aircraft diesel engines like they are now putting in the Cessnas...they also can run on all of the above.
The military has run extensive studies on determining engine life and side affects of running similar, but not the same fuels in road engines. One of the engines tested was a Ford 6.7L Powerstroke diesel - tested multiple engines using different fuels, including kerosene, #2, jet-a, etc. The engine was able to run a significantly long time on many of the different fuels, although eventual failures were noted....So the implication which that example used proves tractors and other ground equipment can run on kerosene is an incorrect segue.
The occasional use of Jet fuel in an ordinary diesel-powered street-vehicle is unlikely to cause immediate damage. (Not to mention it was likely added to a fuel tank already containing diesel fuel.).
It’s also unlikely any street vehicle was run exclusively on jet fuel sufficiently to prove that it is a safe practice either. (And it’s a ridiculously expensive operation to do that also. Running a street vehicle that ordinarily uses $2.50/gal diesel on $5.00/gal jet fuel is.... well... ‘toopid. (Unless the jet fuel is being stolen,... an equally questionable practice intellectually speaking.)
The implication that airport ground-equipment is regularly run on jet fuel is also misleading. Yes, some small operations occasionally use jet fuel from the aircraft-servicing trucks to operate their ground/ramp equipment. They can do that because 1) they get that fuel wholesale, 2) airport ground equipment is not heavily-challenged, as it is used intermittently at low-power demands. Tugs and GPUs don’t have the challenges of agriculutural/constuction equipment that must run hour after hour at heavy demand.
Such anecdotes are only that.... Anecdotes.
Cool greenacresnorth, I practically live at an airport now, as I'm there daily. I think the Avgas could do damage in a normal combustion engine due to the lead content much faster than the Jet A would to a diesel. Yet we also run the Avgas in the snowblowers, crew car, etc.I grew up on an Airport, if it had spark plugs it got avgas, if it didnt it got Jet-A, sometimes if we got a load heavy on Prist, it would make the fuel truck exhaust smell like grapefruit!!! Also ran a dodge pickup with a cummins motor through collage with sump jet-A from the local airport I worked at.
This one? "Evaluation of Military Fuels Using a Ford 6.7L Powerstroke ..."The military has run extensive studies on determining engine life and side affects of running similar, but not the same fuels in road engines. One of the engines tested was a Ford 6.7L Powerstroke diesel - tested multiple engines using different fuels, including kerosene, #2, jet-a, etc. The engine was able to run a significantly long time on many of the different fuels, although eventual failures were noted.