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Steve,
Perhaps you missed the part where I said that the "Racor filter I always installed on my vehicles' fuel lines would do a good enough job of removing anything harmful"? Butch "Steven Shelikoff" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 12 Nov 2005 14:11:30 GMT, "Butch Davis" wrote: John, In the fleet application I used Racor's system which included filtration. On my personal diesel vehicles I simply added the oil directly from the crankcase to a nearly full fuel tank. My reasoning was that the lube oil was well filtered by the oil filter and that the after market Racor filter I always installed in my vehicles' fuel lines would do a good enough job of removing anything harmful. That's not very good reasoning for 2 reasons... first, the typical auto oil filter probably doesn't do as good a job as the racor fuel filter made for the task of filtering diesel fuel. And second, if you left the oil filter in long enough for it to get clogged, the bypass valve will open and it won't filter the oil at all. And since you can't measure the pressure difference across the filter, you have no idea whether the bypass valve opened or not. If you're gonna put the crankcase oil into the fuel system, filter it first. Don't depend on the crankcase oil filter. Steve |
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