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How do you dispose of fuel?

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rbattelle

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When I change fuel filters I end up with about a pint (maybe a quart) of fuel that drains out of the filter housing. I don't want to pour it back in the tank (wouldn't that be like drinking your own urine?), but I don't know how to dispose of it properly. I have nothing I can use to burn it.



What does everyone else do?



-Ryan
 
I don't see a problem with putting it back in the tank. Whatever (very) little contamination may exist will just end up in the new filter.
 
I pour mine in with my waste oil and dispose of it at a local shop. They don't mind fuel in the oil, they just don't want any antifreeze in it, but what they don't know, won't hurt them!!

AJ
 
Ryan,



Do you really have a problem with water or a lot of contamination in your fuel that you need to drain it? I visually check mine for water/contaminants and if there are none there, there's no reason to drain it. I never once drained it on my '02 and haven't needed to yet on my '04. 5.



The extra fuel works well in tiki torches and works better for critter control in summer. Works good for bon fires too. Especially as a helper when starting campfires. ;)
 
mberry said:
Ryan,



Do you really have a problem with water or a lot of contamination in your fuel that you need to drain it? I visually check mine for water/contaminants and if there are none there, there's no reason to drain it. I never once drained it on my '02 and haven't needed to yet on my '04. 5.



No, but when I change filters I have to drain the filter housing. I'm reluctant to put that back in the tank because to me it's like drinking your own urine.



I have no capacity whatsoever to burn it. I don't have any tiki torches, my home has electric heat, and I never build bon fires.



I had considered adding small quantities of it to my lawn mower, but then I read that mixing gasoline and diesel is almost a sure way to make an explosion.



I guess my only choice is to add it to my waste oil.



-Ryan
 
When I change filters, every 10K, I use the water seperator to dump a few oz. into a plastic coke bottle to see if there is any water contamination. If not, and there either isn't or a miniscule amount, then I change the filter with the fuel still in the cannister.



If the fuel is clean I dump it back into the tank figuring most of the nasties are embedded in the filter. I regard it as the same as prefilter fuel that is in the tank. If contaminated I either can burn it or put it in the used oil jugs to toss along the highway at random location in ID :-laf Nah... I pour it in the used oil collection drum.



FYI, urine is sterile - thread hijack. :-laf
 
Ryan - I just dump it in with my used oil that I take for recycling.



Guys, this may sound silly, but does diesel work well for starting campfires? I know it's probably not the most ecologically sound method, but a few times I've really had trouble getting campfires started when it's really wet and cold. How do you do it, just pour a little over the wood and light it up, or what? Sorry, don't mean to hijack your thread Ryan!
 
We burn a lot of brush and tree limbs around my fifteen acres, and there's nothing quite like a quart of diesel to help get the fire goin'. My wife calls it "hamburger helper".



A cautionary tale: Ordinarily you have to work pretty hard at hurting yourself with diesel around an open flame, but it can be done under the proper conditions. We were introduced to the joys of diesel as a fire-starter by Doug, the good-ole-boy backhoe operator we hired years ago to tear down some nasty old out-buildings on my land (Doug's the one who taught us to call it 'hamburger helper'). This being the backwoods of SW Pennsylvania, evverbody just burns their construction debris (Californians, eat your hearts out), so Doug dug a big-ole hole, then used his tractor to knock a wood-frame building into the hole, then threw some hamburger helper on and lit her up. She burned pretty good for a while, but then went out, so ole Doug just threw on another coffee can full of diesel. Nothing happened, so he threw on another can. Nada. Then another can (if you're counting, there's about 2 gallons of diesel in that hole now). About thirty seconds later there was an explosion powerful enough to knock down a couple of nearby trees, and a ball of flame that took all the hair off of ole Doug's head. "Wow" he said (once he could speak again), "it ain't never done THAT before!" The problem, of course, was that all that diesel he was throwing onto the hot embers was evaporating and building up in the bottom of that deep hole, until it finally reached the flash-point concentration, and then it exploded. Don't do that.
 
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