we had a cold snap in KC today... 15F when i stopped to fuel up. The guys at the station were busy changing the fuel filters on the pumps... said the pumps were running slow. I waited for them to finish and figured the tanks are in ground so gelling shouldn't be a problem... added my stanadyne but still when i went to fill up the pumps were only pumping like 1. 3-1. 5 gpm. took me 20 minutes to fill up literally. I don't know if their blend was gelling with the cold, thought in ground tanks wouldn't be a problemo or if they just had a pump problem.
my question is... . is there any risk in running this fuel if in fact they were having gelling problems? does diesel gel as a whole or does it seperate out when gelling so what does flow has different properties than what is our engines require?
I've always had good fuel at this station and i know they turn over pretty decent. the fuel did have more foam than i'd ever seen before if this makes a difference... (guiness vs bud light type of head)
my question is... . is there any risk in running this fuel if in fact they were having gelling problems? does diesel gel as a whole or does it seperate out when gelling so what does flow has different properties than what is our engines require?
I've always had good fuel at this station and i know they turn over pretty decent. the fuel did have more foam than i'd ever seen before if this makes a difference... (guiness vs bud light type of head)