salty I am so pleased you joined TDR. . . I've been wanting to do a full WVO kit on my '98 12-valve for awhile and recently started doing a little more digging on the subject. There are two reasons I want to do this. . . be able to start up and shut down on straight diesel, and to be able to burn a bio-fuel that doesn't take a lot of work to "process. " I like the idea of heating and carefully filtering the WVO then it's good to go. I have a good supply of it, the cafeteria at my job is glad that I take it off their hands.
My main issue is that because I have a short box with a canopy doing an in-bed tank creates an inconvenience with refueling, and takes up precious space. I don't want to hassle with cutting a hole in the canopy to make a fuel fill there. My plan is to install a fuel tank in place of the spare for the diesel tank, and use the main tank for veggie. It looks like it wouldn't be hard to make a fuel fill for the diesel tank behind the license plate, my '68 Cougar's fuel filler is behind the rear plate. I would cut a hole in the plastic behind the place and then mount the plate on a spring-loaded holder. . . should work like a charm. I was just spec'ing it out tonight.
I already have a Fox inline coolant-fuel heater under the truck, and I have the fuel line pumbed for -8AN (3/8" ID) all the way from the pickup in the tank to the stock fuel filter. To complete the system I want to add an in-tank heater, put some insulation on the tank, insulate the coolant lines leading to the tank, and try and put insulation on the fuel lines. I'm hoping this will enable the fuel to reach 160F rather quickly and be able to maintain heat on the highway in very cold temperatures. Then I need to add the 3-way valves, control switches, etc. and temp monitoring (1 probe in the tank and one at the fuel filter). At this point I'm not sure whether to spend the $$$ to buy a kit or try to piece together what I need, I think I could do it for far less than the cost of a kit. My only real concern is to buy quality 3 way valves that will be dead reliable no matter the weather. . . I have read of guys having issues with theirs sticking open and sending WVO back to the diesel tank. . not good.
The key to engine longevity is for the fuel to efficiently atomize and burn completely in the cylinder so it doesn't coat rings and injector tips with partially burned veggie oil. This is a bad, sticky coating will bake to hard deposits when the engine reaches operating temp. The engine and fuel must be thoroughly warmed up to prevent this.