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> Urea Use in 2009 Light Duty and 2010 Medium and Heavy Duty Diesels

> More Biodiesel Confusion

> Root Cause Failure Analysis

> Phase Separation in Ethanol Blended Gasoline’s

> Coolant Problems in 2007-2008 Diesel Engines

> Alert for New York State Customers regarding Retrofit of Emissions Devices on Diesel Engines

> Latest Information of Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel - December 2007

> Non-Road, Locomotive, and Marine Diesel Fuels

> Cold Filter Plug Point vs. Cloud Point Cold Weather Operability in Diesel Fuels including ULSD

> Winter Problems with ULSD

> Black Fuel Filters - Asphaltene Production in ULSD Fuels

> Fuel Phase Separation in Ethanol Blended Gasolines

> NRLM - Non-Road, Locomotive, and Marine Fuels - Non-Highway, Off-Road Diesel Fuels

> Winter Blended Diesel Fuels 2

> Biodiesel

> Use of Diesel Fuel Additives

> Fuels

> Fluids

> Winter Blended Diesel Fuels

> The Color of Diesel Fuel

> Motor Oil for Diesel Engines CJ-4 vs. CI-4

> New EPA Diesel Fuel Additive Labeling Requirements Required as of June 1, 2006

> Diesel Wins Le Mans 24 Hour Endurance Race

> Crude Oil and Total Petroleum Imports Top 15 Countries

> What the Heck is Sticktion

> Ultra-Low Sulfur (S-15) Diesel Fuel Facts

> Water Generation in Stored Diesel Fuels

> Why you should be Using Nitrogen for Inflating Tires

> Radiator/Antifreeze Plugging Problem in Gasoline Engines

> Oil Sludge in Gasoline Engine Vehicles

> Ethanol in Gasoline

> Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel 2

> White Paper on Emergency Backup Power Generators and Fire Pumps

> The Price of Fuel

> Magnetic Fuel Treatment: Myth, Magic, or Mainstream Science?

> Gasoline Problems

> Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel

> MTBE Phase Out in Gasoline's - Possible supply disruption

> Lubricity in High, Low, and Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel Fuels


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Use of Diesel Fuel Additives
or it's not just for winter anymore

Once upon a time diesel engines were relatively simple pieces of big heavy, hard to break iron. You could put almost anything from kerosene to heating oil in them and they would run, maybe not well, but they would run.

Diesel fuel was considered a residual fuel, something left over from making the good stuff (gasoline). It was not supposed to be a good fuel; it was supposed to be a cheap fuel.

Even if this fairy tale was ever true (it actually was not), those days are long, long gone. Diesel engines today are as sophisticated as those of the worlds fastest Formula One race cars. These engines can have fuel system pressures of up to 35,000 psi and injector machining tolerances of 2 microns or less. Fuel filters that used filter down to 30 or 10 microns, now regularly filter down to 7, 5, and even 2 microns.

The new Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel (ULSD) that is now on the market is derived using various Catalytic Cracking refining processes that affect the quality of the fuel on many levels. The "new" ULSD has less oxidative stability, holds more suspended water, forms gums, varnishes, and carbon deposits more quickly, has less lubricity, gels at higher temperatures, is less thermally stable, is more corrosive, and in general is much more problematic.

In short the quality of the fuel has not kept up with the sophistication of the engines.

As a result you can no longer expect untreated fuel to meet the needs of your engines.

It is no longer good enough to treat your fuel just when it is cold outside. The needs for additional lubricity, higher Cetane, water dispersion, higher levels of oxidative and thermal stability, fuel injector cleaning, corrosion inhibition, fuel atomization require continuous year-round treating to protect your equipment and to maximize performance.

Products such as Well Worth Products Summit Fuel Treatment when used as directed in every tank of fuel helps to ensure that your fuel meets or exceeds the OEM requirements.

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