- 45
- 4
- 8
- Location
- Fort Worth, Texas
Has anybody looked at / done a bi-fuel (diesel and natural gas) conversion?
http://www.gfs-corp.com/industry.php/bifuel/
I have a MEP-806B with the 6.8 liter John Deere engine & there is a specific application for this engine:
http://www.gfs-corp.com/industry.php/bifuel/appguide/
John Deere GFS Kit #6068T EVO-1500
I have contacted several of the distributors & so far, I have one quote north of $26k.
Has anybody looked at any other solutions?
From what I've read, about 70% of the fuel supply can be replaced by natural gas & the conversion process is non-invasive: the system can still run on 0% to 70% NG, so you can disconnect the genset from the NG line & go walkabout with it (running 100% diesel), then return to bi-fuel operation when stationary.
I'm just speculating that running 70% NG might also help with the "wet stacking" problems diesel gensets can encounter when running at much less than their rated loads.
Thoughts?
Thanks!!
Franko
http://www.gfs-corp.com/industry.php/bifuel/
I have a MEP-806B with the 6.8 liter John Deere engine & there is a specific application for this engine:
http://www.gfs-corp.com/industry.php/bifuel/appguide/
John Deere GFS Kit #6068T EVO-1500
I have contacted several of the distributors & so far, I have one quote north of $26k.
Has anybody looked at any other solutions?
From what I've read, about 70% of the fuel supply can be replaced by natural gas & the conversion process is non-invasive: the system can still run on 0% to 70% NG, so you can disconnect the genset from the NG line & go walkabout with it (running 100% diesel), then return to bi-fuel operation when stationary.
I'm just speculating that running 70% NG might also help with the "wet stacking" problems diesel gensets can encounter when running at much less than their rated loads.
Thoughts?
Thanks!!
Franko
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