Local dealer, suggested using a diesel additive to any road diesel, in order to increase lubricisity. What brand or type is suggested. I bought some yesterday at Auto zone, which was the same brand TSC carries. thanks
I worked with some guys in Dallas that had working ranches. I remember them refering to the stuff as "red gas" due to the dye. They also said there was a big fine if caught driving a non ag vehicle with the red gas.Whats the reason for putting additive's in highway diesel? I thought only around the winter time you had to put in a treatment to keep the diesel from jelling in cold weather, I had head that there's no real difference in highway and non-highway other then the dye they put in off road diesel so we know which is which and that you don't pay a tax on off road diesel. I've been a truck driver for a number of years and heard a few horror stories about D.O.T pulling over big rigs at random and dipping the fuel tanks to see if someone was putting off road diesel in a highway rig, thats a real nasty fine if you get caught, up wards of two thousand dollars or more.
I'm a little confused with this statement. Was that a brand name of the addative or were you actually adding Jet Fuel (JP4,5 or Jet A)I was adding some Jet fuel but no longer have a source.
Ex Shell
LMAO! oh man your kill'n me...1950's? HA HA HA!Jet A
I'm not real sure you can compair a Kubota engine with a 1950s Army equipments but I could be wrong.
After years of product quality testing if you saw the spec sheets Jet is just a much better grade of DZL. The EPA & AQMD won't be requiring sulpher to be removed from jet. But (Kubota's won't fall out of the sky)
The additives they started adding to DZL a few years back were directly related to the loss of lubricating properties from sulpher removal.
Some of the guys I worked with bought Mercedes just so they could dump all the old jet samples in there tanks and they never added oil.
I think a good comparison here would be the same reason you would never think of running SAE 30 oil in a new car.
nkcblue,I have used Power Serve in the old Dodge for 15 years. My diesel mechanic swears by it, he say use the white bottle in summer to help with Cetane values and to help keep injectors clean. In the winter I use the grey bottle which lowers gelling temps. I figure I have had really good luck all those years with the truck, I am keeping up the same regimine with the little orange beast.