There is plenty of info on fuel storage and rotation already. Easy to find if you search around the web. Some residual hydraulic oil in a drum you fill with 55 gal of diesel isn't going to matter.
That is what I thought. I am going to drain out as much of the hydraulic fluid as I can but will not clean the drums of the remainder. I have read and read and read up on diesel fuel and storage and the use of algicides and stabilizers and also the polishing of fuel by continually having it circulated through filters. That is why I am going to use three 55 gal drums. Two will be filled will fuel and the third empty will be used to store fuel once it is polished from one of the drums. Then repeat the process with the second drum. I just may plumb all of the drums together and let the polishing take place 24/7.
I figure for the polishing, I will need a fuel filter, a water/foreign material separator, and a pump. Figure I will use a 24VDC pump and feed it off a solar panel. As this will be going on constantly 24/7, I will not need a heavy duty pump that pushes 20GPH. As simple pump that does 1GPH means that a drum will be completely circulated in 55 hours or two and a quarter days or so. That is 110 gal of diesel polished (run through the filtering system) every 4 1/2 days. My understanding is that this is more than sufficient to keep the fuel in A1 shape. If I use all three drums for fuel storage, that will be 165 gal of diesel fuel polished 6 hours shy of every week.
Guess I can use a regular diesel fuel filter. I have an inline 12VDC pump from my Onan generator (but it is gas) that still works and was replaced when doing work on the Onan 4KW genset in the motor home...…..it was not the fuel pump (freaking magneto behind the fly wheel kept cutting out after about 5 minutes of use killing the genset and unable to restart, then it would cool and could be restarted, then stop again after 5 minutes). Can I use this inline gas pump for pumping diesel fuel?
Comments?