- Mar 14, 2005
- 18,683
- 3,940
- 50,935
Just for general information I thougt I relate my experience of trying Bio Diesel rather than petrodiesel.
A local depot has started to sell BioDiesel, with claims of it being up to 25% cheaper than normal petro-diesel., @98.9p per litre. Well apart from the cost claim which is only about 18% cheaper than other local filling stations, I thought Id do some research and maybe consider trying it.
There are two quite polarised views about Bio-diesel if you look on the web, predictably those who make and sell the stuff, and conventional petrol heads.
It seems that there are several grades of Bio diesel, B5, B10, B20 all the way up to B100. The figures represent the percentage of the Biomass diesel in the mixture, the remainder is conventional fuel.
Now the buyer has to be aware, because some outlets do not make it clear what grade their fuel is, and unless you ask you may be supplied any of the mixtures above. There is also another important factor, and that is bio-diesel is not compatible with some engines. Typically any vehicle manufactured before 1993 must not use Bio diesel, as the fuel will quickly rot through any of the rubber based piping and seals in the fuel system, and there are some other mechanical reasons that makes then less suited to the new fuel.
Later cars had to be fitted with different rubber compounds that were more tolerant of the fuel. (there is a small amount of Bio-diesel already mixed with normal diesel as part of the petrochemicals bit to go 'green')
I run a Saab 9-3 2.2Dit diesel (GM 2.2 engine), , It is not the most refined engine, but it does give the vehicle a respectable performance, and reasonable fuel economy. Having been manufactured in 2001 it should be safe to use Bio in it. I went for the plunge, in a tank that holds 70Ltrs I had it brimmed with just 48 litres of B100 that gave me about a 60% mixture of Bio.
It took a few minutes of driving to become aware of any differences, and I have to report that I found some marked changes.
Acceleration performance is much worse. Previously accelerating from 40 to 50 in 5th gear would take about 5 seconds, it now takes 12 to 15 seconds.
There is marked lack of power at low RPM,
And fuel consumption has dropped from around 44mpg down to 40 and is still showing signs of dropping further.
I dread to think what the cars performance will be when if I tried to tow. I think it would struggle on Bio, where as it is more than acceptable on petro-diesel.
I can full understand that different engines may be able to extract more from the Bio diesel, so I would be interested to hear of other peoples experience with it.
A local depot has started to sell BioDiesel, with claims of it being up to 25% cheaper than normal petro-diesel., @98.9p per litre. Well apart from the cost claim which is only about 18% cheaper than other local filling stations, I thought Id do some research and maybe consider trying it.
There are two quite polarised views about Bio-diesel if you look on the web, predictably those who make and sell the stuff, and conventional petrol heads.
It seems that there are several grades of Bio diesel, B5, B10, B20 all the way up to B100. The figures represent the percentage of the Biomass diesel in the mixture, the remainder is conventional fuel.
Now the buyer has to be aware, because some outlets do not make it clear what grade their fuel is, and unless you ask you may be supplied any of the mixtures above. There is also another important factor, and that is bio-diesel is not compatible with some engines. Typically any vehicle manufactured before 1993 must not use Bio diesel, as the fuel will quickly rot through any of the rubber based piping and seals in the fuel system, and there are some other mechanical reasons that makes then less suited to the new fuel.
Later cars had to be fitted with different rubber compounds that were more tolerant of the fuel. (there is a small amount of Bio-diesel already mixed with normal diesel as part of the petrochemicals bit to go 'green')
I run a Saab 9-3 2.2Dit diesel (GM 2.2 engine), , It is not the most refined engine, but it does give the vehicle a respectable performance, and reasonable fuel economy. Having been manufactured in 2001 it should be safe to use Bio in it. I went for the plunge, in a tank that holds 70Ltrs I had it brimmed with just 48 litres of B100 that gave me about a 60% mixture of Bio.
It took a few minutes of driving to become aware of any differences, and I have to report that I found some marked changes.
Acceleration performance is much worse. Previously accelerating from 40 to 50 in 5th gear would take about 5 seconds, it now takes 12 to 15 seconds.
There is marked lack of power at low RPM,
And fuel consumption has dropped from around 44mpg down to 40 and is still showing signs of dropping further.
I dread to think what the cars performance will be when if I tried to tow. I think it would struggle on Bio, where as it is more than acceptable on petro-diesel.
I can full understand that different engines may be able to extract more from the Bio diesel, so I would be interested to hear of other peoples experience with it.