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About 15 years ago, maybe more, there was a truck featured in a trucking
magazine that did just that, although it was a continuous operation. Oil was continuously bled out of the system to be combined with the incoming fuel, and fresh oil added, continuously. I would assume the oil would have to be filtered to the extreme before you would want to allow it through the injectors. IIRC, the truck was sort of a rolling demo, painted black, and a name something like Mega. "Skip Gundlach" wrote in message oups.com... This may have been covered in some distant past threads, but if so, I don't recall the outcome of what most likely was conjecture rather than petroleum engineering observation, in any event. Thus... My Perkins 4-154 has a sump drain which connects to a hose with a seacock inline. To do oil changes, one opens the seacock, connects a pump to the higher-than-the-engine end of the hose and evacuates the old oil, changes the filter and puts in new oil. My fuel polishing setup is now complete, and is such overkill in volume (3.5 gpm, run for 24 hours, would recycle my entire tank more than 50 times, at a cost of about 19AH) that I'm comfortable with its ability to clean my tank, regardless of what may come up the common supply tube (engine feeds from the same line). I've also now got a dual Racor setup to be able to change filters with the engine running - both the polishing system and the Racors have vacuum gauges to monitor appropriate change intervals - but that's not the point of my post. That big pump, recycling to that big tank, is... Is there any scientific reason which would encourage, or discourage, utilizing a pump to do engine oil change waste oil evacuations, putting the waste oil into the diesel tank (circa 100 gallons; i.e. ~1-2% typical), for mixing and burning with the rest, thus neatly not only solving the disposal problem but also reclaiming the dead dinos' energy? If there are engineering reasons against, due to the nature of the waste oil, are there any levels of change (more frequent) which would mitigate those, assuming that filter changes occurred at the same intervals? I know it's useless to ask :{)) but it would be more informative to have sound engineering rather than conjecture in reply to this topic... L8R Skip, back to shoring up ancient flooring supports Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery! Follow us at http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog and/or http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
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