Gary - K7GLD said:I'm very interested in possibly buying a 55 gallon drum of biodiesel - but base price plus shipping would seem to be expensive? I plan to check with the local Texaco distributor to see if they have or would order it for me at a better price than I could get on my own. My intent is more related to lubricity, and reading I have done indicates that 1 or 2 percent gets the job done, but a B20 percentage would be my goal, and a 55 gallon drum would last me quite a while under current truck driving circumstances...
Good luck in your search for biodiesel Gary!
My guy charged me $2. 95 per gallon for the B95 + $40 for the drum + $35 for the hand pump. So the setup charges were an extra $75 for the first drum and then $40 for each add'l drum as the pump can be moved from drum to drum.
Refills have no extra charges -- just the cost of the fuel. Delivery is free if I buy 150+ gallons on a visit OR he combines the visit with others in my area.
TIP: Home Depot sells furniture dolly's for $19. 95 and they're rated up to 1000 lbs. Get one for each drum before you get the biodiesel. You'll be happy you did as you can wheel it around in the garage. It will also keep condensation from forming on the bottom of the drum if it's off the ground.
Another TIP: I bought a 90 degree galvanized 3/4" elbow and a 6" pipe to go at the end of the 1" diameter vinyl hose from the hand pump. The pump doesn't come with the 1" vinyl hose -- you can buy that by the foot at Home Depot. After spilling biodiesel on the garage floor I went back to Home Depot and $3. 48 in parts later I had my own "nozzle" so no more spilling. The 1" vinyl hose from the pump to the tank was just slightly too cumbersome and wasn't reliable to stay in the tank opening. If you pushed it in too far, it would just kink. The cheap nozzle made all the difference.