It can't be very low a temperature for diesel, because when I was growing up in the frozen North of Scotland, buses and lorries used to get freezing diesel fairly regularly in winter.
No school bus
No school bus
Wondermike said:It can't be very low a temperature for diesel, because when I was growing up in the frozen North of Scotland, buses and lorries used to get freezing diesel fairly regularly in winter.
No school bus![]()
mcbeee said:Most places switch to a "Winter" grade of diesel. Petrol won't freeze anytime I'm going to be needing it but the moisture in the tank builds up and mixes in the lines and freezes. I put a post on about Gas line antifreeze earlier today.
Have noticed a lot of new potholes appearing in and around Durham,quite a few of them on the roads that i use regularly,So not only spring damage but also wheel damage.If they have'nt got the money to repair the roads whats the chances of claiming from them when the car is damaged due to poor road condition.The Moo said:And when this lot thaws we will see even more potholes and the ones we don't see in the dark will result in more broken springs. Guess there will be no money to patch the roads up any time soon.......
EdButler said:I do agree they've mucked up somewhat, but the state of the roads could be a LOT worse... We dont really pay a premium for road tax though. Other european countries all have similar ways of making money, be it taxation or toll roads (once spent €65 a day in tolls in Italy!).
ksher said:What is the freezing point of unleaded/diesel? I heard that diesel will freeze first.
Redzedfour said:If they have'nt got the money to repair the roads whats the chances of claiming from them when the car is damaged due to poor road condition.
mcbeee said:Eastern Canada is warmer & gets lots and lots of wet, heavy snow, the west is colder and gets much less snow and the west coast is like UK weather.
I'll take the cold and minimum snow over heavy wet stuff anytime......
Siftah said:Redzedfour said:If they have'nt got the money to repair the roads whats the chances of claiming from them when the car is damaged due to poor road condition.
It'll come out of a different budget pot and so it's likely you'll be able to make a claim. I've been told in the past that the councils put aside a pot each year for people making damage claims and will raise or lower the size of the pot depending on the state of the roads and how much they're allocating to the road maintenance that year.
It must work out a lot cheaper to pay out claims on the small number of people who bother to claim than it does to spend hundreds of thousands (if not millions) on maintaining the roads. I guess that will depend heavily on your local council and how they've allocated their budget, however.
![]()
PawnSacrifice said:Ha... I remember those days! Pesky additives...
Answer from the web:
"Like most fuels, diesel is a mix of hydrocarbons, and the components have different freezing points. For Number 2 diesel, as the ambient temperatures drop toward 32 degrees F (0 degrees C), it begins to cloud, due to the paraffin in the fuel solidifying. As the temperatures drop below 32 F, the molecules combine into solids, large enough to be stopped by the filter. This is known as the gel point, and generally occurs about 15 degrees F (-9.5 degrees C) below the cloud point.
This wax then forms a coating on the filter which results in a loss of engine power. The same thing happens on starting an engine when the temperature is below freezing. The filter becomes almost instantly coated with wax - usually, enough fuel gets through to allow the engine to idle, but not attain operating RPM. There are two common ways to overcome this: one is a diesel additive, the other is a fuel heater.
In Alaska and other colder climates, lorries are running regularly at minus 51 degrees or lower so as you see it depends on additives and heating but to freeze as in turning solid you would need laboratory conditions as nature cannot go cold enough to freeze to a low enough temperature."
daveg said:I carefully cleared the excess snow off mine with a window scraper - and the rest with luke warm water. Don't know about the water repellancy - but the fabric can of course be treated to make it more repellant if need be.