projoCars
On the road again, with bio-diesel
01:00 AM EST on Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Dear Tom and Ray:
I heard an interview recently on NPR’s Fresh Air. Terry Gross was interviewing Willie Nelson, who was talking about how his wife bought a diesel car a few years back and started using biofuel in it (recycled grease and oil, reconstituted into vegetable oil — that’s biofuel?). Then he said he bought a Mercedes diesel and started using it in that car. Is biofuel usable in all diesel engines?
RAY: One type of biofuel is, Paul. It’s called bio-diesel. And Willie Nelson not only uses it, he sells the stuff. He calls it Bio Willie.
TOM: In addition to its use as a fuel, my brother has discovered that it works very nicely in the shower as a gentle exfoliant.
RAY: There are two basic types of plant-oil fuels, Paul. The first type is bio-diesel, which can be used in almost any diesel-powered car. That’s usually soybean or rapeseed oil that’s chemically altered to remove the glycerine, and then mixed with traditional diesel fuel.
TOM: The regular diesel fuel is in there to make the mixture easier to start, and to keep it from getting gloppy at lower temperatures.
RAY: You’ll see it listed for sale as B5, B20 or B100 bio-diesel. B5, for instance, means it’s 5 percent bio-diesel and 95 percent diesel fuel (from petroleum). B5 is universally considered safe for all diesel engines. Lots of people say B20 is fine, too.
TOM: The jury is still out on higher concentrations. There’s some concern that in older engines, like from the early 1990s, before synthetic fuel lines were widely used, bio-diesel might break down rubber components in the fuel system, so it’s worth having rubber components inspected after six months of use. But there are a lot of people who say they use B20 in the winter and B100 in the summer without any problem at all.
RAY: So that’s bio-diesel. Then there’s plain old vegetable oil — without diesel fuel mixed in. That can either be manufactured directly from plants or collected as waste oil from the fryolator at your local Burger Queen.
TOM: But that’s not something you can use in just any car. It congeals much too easily. Cars have to be modified significantly to run on straight vegetable oil (also called SVO).
RAY: You need to have a separate tank for regular diesel fuel. You use the diesel to start your engine and warm it up. The engine’s coolant would then warm up the SVO. Once it’s warm, you can switch to using the SVO as fuel. But then you have to switch back to regular diesel fuel before you shut it off, to make sure there’s no SVO left in the fuel lines when you shut it down. Otherwise, the lines will clog up like my Uncle Ciccione’s arteries.
TOM: So SVO is still for the wacko fringe (go ahead, write to me and complain, fellas; I can take it), and not the average guy who wants to do a little something easy to improve the environment.
RAY: Bio-diesel will do a little bit to improve things. It does burn cleaner than standard diesel fuel. And assuming the “bio” part is grown in the United States, it helps promote energy independence.
TOM: Plus, your tailpipe exhaust will smell vaguely like French fries. Which will explain the gangs of hungry teenagers following you around all the time.
RAY: By the way, Paul, if you want even more info about alternative fuels, we’ve put together a whole section about them at our Web site, www.cartalk.com.
Dear Tom and Ray:
Here in the nation’s capital, we have some streets or parking lots with signs that say “back-in parking only.” I was ticketed when I overlooked this requirement. My question: What’s the advantage of requiring drivers to back in to a parking space? The spot where I was ticketed was on a wide two-way street. I can’t see how backing in is safer than backing out. What am I missing? Or is this just to make it easier for the ticket writer to access your windshield?
TOM: It actually IS safer, Carroll. By the way, we’re talking about parking spaces that are perpendicular, or at an angle, to the curb — not parallel-parking spaces.
RAY: These are spaces that require you to drive past the parking space, stop and then back in.
TOM: The primary advantage is that it’s not terribly dangerous to back in to a space — because the cars behind you can see you stopping and signaling — and it’s a lot safer to pull OUT going forward.
RAY: Look at it from the other point of view. If you park in the traditional way, you’ve pulled hood-first into an angled space. Now, when you back out, your trunk goes out first. Where are you? You’re at the front of the car. While your car’s butt is sticking out into traffic, you can’t see if there are cars coming, because your view is blocked by the passenger compartments of the cars or SUVs parked next to you. Also, the cars coming down the street have no real warning that you’re about to back out. All of a sudden, your trunk starts lurching out into the road.
TOM: Whereas when you back in to a space and then pull out, you pull out hood-first, so you are quickly in a position to see over the hoods of the cars next to you and see if any traffic is coming before pulling out onto the road.
RAY: So, believe it or not, Carroll, you have discovered evidence of intelligent life in our nation’s capital. Congratulations.
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