For the first time in 10 + years of diesel ownership I had my fuel gel recently leaving me stranded. Fortunately I was at a ski resort and flagged down a diesel tow truck driver who got me some antigel additive. After an hour and 20 minutes of trying to start the truck every 10 minutes it started and ran with no problems for the 8 hour trip home.
Here's what happened. Fill truck with half tank of fuel in Staunton VA then traveled to Snowshoe WV. Temps in Staunton were less than 20 degrees all week prior to me fueling. On way to Snowshoe that night saw temps as low as -7 degrees F. No problems. For 3 days I drove truck back and forth at Snowshoe with temps as low as 6 F during the daytime and 0 F at night.
Day to go home temps are -6 at night and 0 when we leave. I let truck idle for 15 minutes with no problems while we loaded truck. Go to leave and truck dies while idling through parking lot. Restart truck and get 20 ft down road then it barely runs and will go 5 mph. Pull into a parking lot where it dies. Then I do the above with the antigel and finally leave 1hr 20 minutes later. Truck would run for 15 to 20 seconds then cutoff until it finally ran after 1 hr 20 minutes. I was able to build heat in the coolant during this time to 180 degrees.
Why would the truck idle if the fuel was gelled up to start off with? I did not have a heater plug in at any point during the trip.
Is it typical to take this long for antigel to work?
Do you think I got a poorly blended batch of fuel in Staunton?
Did some reading on antigel additives and decided on Power Service Arctic antigel for future cold snaps. Anyone have anything better?
Do these trucks have an electric fuel tank heater?
Do all the new trucks have a block heater plug in? Yes I know I need to crawl under and look at it. Truck did not sound happy trying to start in -6 degrees but did pretty quickly.
Thanks,
Ben
Here's what happened. Fill truck with half tank of fuel in Staunton VA then traveled to Snowshoe WV. Temps in Staunton were less than 20 degrees all week prior to me fueling. On way to Snowshoe that night saw temps as low as -7 degrees F. No problems. For 3 days I drove truck back and forth at Snowshoe with temps as low as 6 F during the daytime and 0 F at night.
Day to go home temps are -6 at night and 0 when we leave. I let truck idle for 15 minutes with no problems while we loaded truck. Go to leave and truck dies while idling through parking lot. Restart truck and get 20 ft down road then it barely runs and will go 5 mph. Pull into a parking lot where it dies. Then I do the above with the antigel and finally leave 1hr 20 minutes later. Truck would run for 15 to 20 seconds then cutoff until it finally ran after 1 hr 20 minutes. I was able to build heat in the coolant during this time to 180 degrees.
Why would the truck idle if the fuel was gelled up to start off with? I did not have a heater plug in at any point during the trip.
Is it typical to take this long for antigel to work?
Do you think I got a poorly blended batch of fuel in Staunton?
Did some reading on antigel additives and decided on Power Service Arctic antigel for future cold snaps. Anyone have anything better?
Do these trucks have an electric fuel tank heater?
Do all the new trucks have a block heater plug in? Yes I know I need to crawl under and look at it. Truck did not sound happy trying to start in -6 degrees but did pretty quickly.
Thanks,
Ben