Regal 53 SC Owner's Manual page 55

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DIESEL FUEL PROCESSING BASICS
Diesel fuel properties have changed in recent years due to
the way the product is processed today at the refi neries.
A couple of decades ago diesel fuel, gasoline, home heat-
ing oil among other distillation products were processed
by heating the crude oil. At different boiling tempera-
tures, various parts of the crude oil were evaporated then
condensed sending the fi nal products to storage tanks for
distribution. The distillation process generally produced
stable diesel fuel with a storage life of several months.
Around 50% of the oil left over from the distillation pro-
cess was designated as heavy fuel oil being used for ship's,
power plants, and industrial products such as nylon, plas-
tics, and asphalt.
Refi ning crude oil today has changed dramatically due
to increased demand for the product. A process called
"chemical cracking" has allowed the refi ner to extract
more of the lighter distillates from the crude oil leaving
about 16% of the residual as heavy fuel oils. Lowering the
diesel fuel sulphur levels due to environmental concerns
has led to further fuel instability. Due to these newer
methods of refi ning diesel fuel is far less stable than the
older distillation process.
There are different theorems on defi ning fuel system "al-
gae" and how it develops in the vessel's fuel tank. Algae is
slang for the fungus that grows in fuel tanks.
One school of thought isolates two of the key fuel compo-
nents. Asphaltenes and paraffi ns in this premise begin to
oxidize and re-polymerize forming clusters resulting in
fuel tank "algae". As these clusters "grow" in size they
cling themselves to tank walls and baffl es.
Others state that "algae" is formed when water condenses
in the boat's fuel tank. Water can enter the vessel's fuel
tank through the fuel pumping process at the fuel dock
since their tank may already be contaminated with algae-
micro organisms. Once inside the tank these algae-mi-
croscopic organisms from the plant kingdom are able to
combine with water and diesel to form tank sludge.
Keeping tanks free from water, dirt and micro organisms
is almost impossible, but luckily you can eliminate them
before they reach the engine and fuel injectors through
the use of primary and secondary fuel fi lters. Algae ends
up in the fuel system once the boat is running which
breaks up the tank "algae" and/or sludge into mini clus-
ters. Algae ends up in the fuel system once the boat is
running which breaks up the tank "algae" and/or sludge
into mini clusters. When this condition is present in the
marine diesel fuel system the fuel does not combust rap-
idly as it should resulting in a loss of engine effi ciency.
Basically, with either school of thought this "algae" or
fuel tank sludge is the result of aging diesel fuel. It can
occur in as little as 60-90 days depending on the condi-
tion of the tanks and environment where the diesel fuel
is stored.
Using diesel fuel in this condition may cause the follow-
ing:
Fuel tank sludge-remove manually or by chemicals
Dirty engine oil
Shortened engine component life
Smoke emitting from the engine exhaust system
Carbon deposits in the engine
Incomplete combustion
Loss of power and performance
Clogged primary and secondary fuel fi lters
Malfunctioning fuel injectors
3
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