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I also have other diesel equipment. I have a John Deere 5520 and John Deere 4600 tractors, a deuce, a diesel F250 and a diesel Jetta. I simply pull fuel from those tanks and it is always fresh.
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Here is a link for storage tanks; https://efotg.sc.egov.usda.gov/refe...bove_Ground_Storage_(NO)_(713)_CPS_140129.pdfAnyone have more information on this? I was also thinking about buying a 150 gallon tank and putting it outside.
Everybody says price per combustible gallon and electricity produced diesel is the winner no matter who you askExpensive? Have you priced out a 1000gal propane tank to buy vs two 55gal drums? Most all of the propane generators dont sip fuel they guzzle it. Your also still relying on a propane truck to deliver fuel. Diesel you can pump and transfer your self.
NG has its own problems.
NG should be your only choice if you have it plumbed to your house. when I was back in New York natural gas is of abundant availability so yes Ng rules when you have and unlimited amounts flowing undergroundin my area propane is 1.25 gallon and NG is even cheaper. propane stores for longer with less hassle. why use a 1000 gallon tank? in my area a 250 gallon above ground propane tank cost about 250 dollars. what is wrong with having it delivered? NG would be my choice though because you can just hook it to the pipeline. i would make sure the gen was a 1800 rpm model with a 4 pole head.
just to clarify a bit. my comments were slanted toward the problems with stored fuel when your usage is small not toward what kind of generator is best. i have NG in abundance propane in abundance and diesel fuel in abundance. my generator usage is small and for outages only. if i had to store diesel for the generator only it would be impractical. fortunately that isn't a problem for me but may be for others. if i had to store a large amount of fuel for my generator only and only needed my gen a few hours every couple of years i would definitely consider propane just for the simplicity of storage. the fuel cost under those circumstances would be negligible.NG should be your only choice if you have it plumbed to your house. when I was back in New York natural gas is of abundant availability so yes Ng rules when you have and unlimited amounts flowing underground
Here in deep South Florida specifically in some of the newer communities everything is electric or propane we’re not fortunate enough to have it coming to our homes
But I would still put a diesel against gas any day
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Thanks for that info. Sounds like staying small is better.Here is a link for storage tanks; https://efotg.sc.egov.usda.gov/refe...bove_Ground_Storage_(NO)_(713)_CPS_140129.pdf
https://www.michigan.gov/lara/0,4601,7-154-89334_42271_4115_4237-8866--,00.html
Ironically if you have a trailer mounted genset with the tank plumbed in a 150 gallon tank is no issue .
Storing any fuel for a single use that may only happen once in a blue moon wouldnt be wise, Propane included. Not to mention most of those propane generators drink it like its free.just to clarify a bit. my comments were slanted toward the problems with stored fuel when your usage is small not toward what kind of generator is best. i have NG in abundance propane in abundance and diesel fuel in abundance. my generator usage is small and for outages only. if i had to store diesel for the generator only it would be impractical. fortunately that isn't a problem for me but may be for others. if i had to store a large amount of fuel for my generator only and only needed my gen a few hours every couple of years i would definitely consider propane just for the simplicity of storage. the fuel cost under those circumstances would be negligible.
I can tell you first hand propane is my last choice for fuel in a generator . I have a 5000w Kawasaki that runs on gasoline or propane and at full load I get about 13 hours on gasoline , the one time I hooked it to propane it sucked a 70 pound tank dry in less than 4 hours. it don't take a math major to figure out thats a 20 pound tank of propane to a 3/4 of a gallon of gasoline.in my area propane is 1.25 gallon and NG is even cheaper. propane stores for longer with less hassle. why use a 1000 gallon tank? in my area a 250 gallon above ground propane tank cost about 250 dollars. what is wrong with having it delivered? NG would be my choice though because you can just hook it to the pipeline. i would make sure the gen was a 1800 rpm model with a 4 pole head.
The storage idea was pretty much covered for the OP in the 2 links I provided (post #22 )on storage in michigan ( we are both from michigan ).somehow this has become a propane vs diesel thread. the original was more about storage not what was the best fuel.
Well...since our local power outage that began on Feb 25, 2019 there are still thousands without power here in Oregon. They are now on day 10+ without power due to a record breaking winter snow storm that has left some of the more remote roads still impassible due to downed trees and snow drifts so they can't even get out to get fuel.You guys are forgetting that he may not want 100s of gallons of diesel nor may he beable to use it in a timely manor. 20days with out power is not normal any where in this country so having 250gal of diesel sitting around may be more of a liability than a benifit.
If you can get diesel in an outage why not have the storage capacity clean/ready.