91W350
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- Salina, Kansas
Never had that problem, I have about gone the other way and filled my Honda with diesel, so used to diesel.... My son laughs at me when I turned the key on and wait a few seconds before starting the Honda.
When I was working for Crane Rental, we had a guy fill a gasoline forklift with diesel fuel. It actually died before he got it to the shop. It did not take long to figure that one out. I had an old 1974 3/4 ton International Pickup with the fuel guzzling 392 in it and a 4.10 axle. I just pumped the diesel out of the fork lift and into the two tanks on the old Binder. I had the forklift running in less than an hour and got to drive a smoky Binder for a few days. It did not accelerate very good, but it would still run 55 and hold it through the hills coming to town. It was a lot cheaper than buying gasoline....
Had a buddy fill his Power Stroke with gasoline and realized it after driving a few blocks. It also did not run very well. He called a local Ford guy who told him it happens all the time. Just drain the tank and fill it with diesel. They did disconnect the glow and fired it up as the engine was still warm. He could not tell any difference once the fuel in the lines made the swap back to diesel. He ran the gasoline through a one ton shop truck with a 400 in it and apparently the 25 to 30 percent of diesel he had in it did not bother the old Ford shop truck any.
I have heard of a lot of guys adding a gallon or two of gasoline in the winter to stop gelling, but I never tried it. I pretty much run #2 as long as I can, then only buy premium fuel to get through the coldest snaps. If I get caught with #2 and a cold front is coming, I just double the dose of Power Service. Glen
When I was working for Crane Rental, we had a guy fill a gasoline forklift with diesel fuel. It actually died before he got it to the shop. It did not take long to figure that one out. I had an old 1974 3/4 ton International Pickup with the fuel guzzling 392 in it and a 4.10 axle. I just pumped the diesel out of the fork lift and into the two tanks on the old Binder. I had the forklift running in less than an hour and got to drive a smoky Binder for a few days. It did not accelerate very good, but it would still run 55 and hold it through the hills coming to town. It was a lot cheaper than buying gasoline....
Had a buddy fill his Power Stroke with gasoline and realized it after driving a few blocks. It also did not run very well. He called a local Ford guy who told him it happens all the time. Just drain the tank and fill it with diesel. They did disconnect the glow and fired it up as the engine was still warm. He could not tell any difference once the fuel in the lines made the swap back to diesel. He ran the gasoline through a one ton shop truck with a 400 in it and apparently the 25 to 30 percent of diesel he had in it did not bother the old Ford shop truck any.
I have heard of a lot of guys adding a gallon or two of gasoline in the winter to stop gelling, but I never tried it. I pretty much run #2 as long as I can, then only buy premium fuel to get through the coldest snaps. If I get caught with #2 and a cold front is coming, I just double the dose of Power Service. Glen