About 35 years ago Detroit Diesel.ran an experimental program for city bus engines running on methanol. These were 6V92 engines. The diesel fuel versions were 277HP with engine life of about 350,000 miles. The methanol engines were also 277HP but required about double the fuel to be injected. The heads looked the same but had glow plugs from the Chev 5.7 diesel. There was a glowplug controller with LEDs that flashed when the glow plugs were energised. The heat of vapourisation is so high with methanol that it would absorb the heat of compression from the air and not fire in a cold engine. The engine running sounded like a blown alcohol drag engine. Once it did a run and the cylinders were well warmed up it idled smooth as silk, for about 2 minutes when it had cooled the cylinders and the rough idle came back. The early testing gave engine life of 50,000 miles due to the high quantity of fuel being injected washed the cylinder walls. Many additives were tested in the fuel and got engine life up to 100,000 miles. Eventually the engines were converted back to diesel fuel but initially the methanol heads were used. They ran fine during a run on the route, but would not start after being shut off. The fuel system would have to be primed again. The methanol heads were engineeredcto retain heat, which boiled the fuel sitting in the fuel rails. The heads were then replaced with diesel heads and no more problem. Tractor pullers will be rebuilt fairly often so ring and cylinder wall life is not the same concern as a daily driver. It was an interesting experiment. The idea had come about to reduce soot emissions in city use. That part was successful. I think diesel engines converted to run on natural gas would be the answer. Large industrial engines can be had in diesel or natural gas fuel versions.
I remember when myth busters did a fuel economy test and all of the results were the same. They ran a small tank similar to this and didnt realize the fuel was returning to the tank. They put the episode out too.
the knock on initial start up is likely an airlocked injector since you ran it out of fuel, sometimes reving it will clear it, but its usually easier to just crack the injector lines and let the air bleed off while its running.
You’re probably right. I drove a Renault built Mack truck, once. There was a fuel leak SOMEWHERE that we never found. Didn’t leak fuel, but if the truck sat for a weekend, it lost its prime. Every time the truck sat for a few days, I had to put the cab up and pump the heck out of the hand primer. It would knock until fuel was flowing into the return lines. If I really gave it a good prime, it wouldn’t knock, but it took a long time to wait for that squeak in the lines that said all the injectors were fully primed, and she wouldn’t knock upon startup.
Yep - if you compare 7:58 to any other point after they've revved the tits off it enough to run fuel through the entire system there's a very noticeable difference which would elude to an airlocked injector. Firstly is that really loud knock that could easily be mistaken for a rodknock, but secondly the fact it was misfiring like crazy. I've had the same behaviour out of my Ford KKDA when I did injector seals and one of the injectors had airlocked. That thing made a right knock 'til I gave it a few hits of throttle... Which was kinda required anyway since it really didn't like running on 3 cylinders while that injector was replenishing lol
M10 will more than double your torque output at a given RPM low in the range compared to straight diesel. As you increase RPM, the torque improvement decreases to double the output. As you increase to M20, output advantage drops, M30 drops even more. To get a stable mix, you might try two to one butanol to methanol for the alcohol blend. You might also try lubricity additive like Stanadyne. Watch out for any vehicle fuel components using aluminum: methanol will corrode it severely, so need anti-corrosion additive. Methanol can also eat some seal and oring materials. Need to change out to methanol resistant seals and orings ...
I've run a water - methanol injection kit on my 600 Signature Series Cummins for over a million miles. Never had an issue with rusting. I use Howes with every fill up.
I recall that, as a truck driver, I used to put 5 gallons of super petrol (gasoline) in a 50 gallon tank of diesel. Made the diesel engine run real well and produced a flame out the exhaust stack about 3 feet long. It was better seen at night.
@grantyentis5507 your obviously not very old. When there was no 'winter diesel ' you put petrol in up to 30% to stop it waxing. It was a proper thing, I had a 93 bmw diesel that told you to do it at anything below -20c.
2006 I had a International 9400 with dual 150 tanks. During winter if I couldn't find anti gel I would use about 2 gallons of regular 87 gasoline. Never had any problems
I noticed the heat coming off your head when you were doing the heavy duty ratio calculations for the mixture. I was afraid the fuel might ignite before you got to use it.
back in 1986 I rode with a trucker up Cajon Pass in California which is a real bitch in a loaded bottom dump. He had many miles on the engine and it seriously needed a rebuild, but it went up that hill like it wasn't there, 60 mph plus. He had a 20 pound propane bottle on the floor and when he started up the hill, he turned on the propane bottle that had a hose going directly into the air filter, the pyrometer temp went down, the stack was clear, and the speed went up.
Quick tip! When you pour from a 5 gal bucket with a spout, if you lay that bad boy on its side with the spout at the 12 o’clock position and then slowly roll it, it’ll pour ezpz nice and controlled like
I would add a little bit of ATF in the diesel for a little bit extra lubricity. Just don’t get caught with it in your tank on the road because carbs for mistake it for red diesel for agriculture use.
The methanol super stock diesels use a different cylinder head with spark plugs and if I remember right they change the pistons also to put the combustion chamber in the cylinder head instead of the piston. Basically a gas engine built on a super tough diesel block
The Alcohol Diesels use spark plugs and are not direct injection like diesel. It's a total conversion to a gas engine with spark plugs while using the ultra strong diesel motor to hold the power
@@100pyatt well to begin with, they do that as you can buy 16-20L v8 or v12 engines cheaply, they have high compression ratio, all you need is machine it for spark plug, put injectors in intake and benefit from displacement and compression ratio (no problem for methanol).. not so good for road cars (as engine weights half a ton) but in pulling category where you need power and grip (from weight) it fits well, and is cheaper than modifying stock diesel engine
Mabye put a injector in the intake of even a carb, run the methanol through that way. The diesel might act as a pilot light kinda for the alcohol. Not sure how long the injection pump will last without diesel or oil to lub it. See if you could run a propane mixer on the intake
This experiment is great! Here in Latvia we use ethanol (on petrol cars) after ethanol chiptuning. As far as I know my friends Honda is knocking first minutes. Engine warms up, knocking disappears. I would say, your methanol knocking really might be due to temperature. I don't get it, why you dont use LPG as fuel in USA, Octane is 108-113(they mix propane/butane in winter and summer differentially), so my Honda H22A is chiptuned for LPG (liquid petrolium gas) as fuel. If chiptuned, lpg gives more power, than Latvia's petrol (octane 98). My Honda was champion in local street drag-race. And Diesel engine can run 50% LPG 50% diesel. We do that (rarely) that in Latvia as well.
My buddy has a lpg/diesel 50/50 system on his logging truck (in the states). The thing is a complete hotrod. He pulls illegally sized loads on the highway all the time.
@@Helder_Paulo 450hp here diesel only on compounded pd130 :D I was about to comment that VW Sold T5 Multivan with LPG injection (i think 100% lpg), tho quite rare as you would need to pay more
5:22 heyyyaaa...if you rotate the can so the spout is at the high point (not at the bottom) when you're pouring it outta those cans...it won't slop and splash around so bad, and you get to tip it over further before it comes out too......jus sayin'
No doubt the system is very well aerated. It will take a fair amount of time to get all the air out of the pump, lines, rail and injectors. You should have refilled system with good diesel, then run it long enough to get all the air out. I bet much of your fuel was shuttled back to fuel tank, through fuel return.
it's because the compression is so low, it would hydro lock at 40 psi other wise. so they make the connecting rods short enough that it runs on gas and only when the forced induction starts going the ecu sends diesel in.
Two things. Diesel ignites with the heat of high compression so it is a very different fuel to gasoline that requires lower compression and a spark, so methanol is not a replacement fuel for Diesel engine. The diesel you get in winter in cold climates is not the same as summer diesel as it has anti gelling agents and the like mixed in that may not play well with methanol. Using kerosene would have been a better choice for the test. All that said methanol injection at the air intake is a possible benefit as long as the amount is small enough that it doesn’t ignite before the diesel is injected. This can really bump up the power and reduce pollution and reduce the amount of diesel needed to be injected for a cool burn . If you want economy you need to reduce the fuel injected but that increases heat and pollution, methanol injection cools the charge air as well as reducing the lean burn of the initial fuel spurt.
I’ve never agreed with the idea that mixing methanol or ethanol with gasoline or diesel is more efficient or cleaner. A gallon of ethanol produces about 65% of the energy in a gallon of gasoline or diesel and methanol is only about 50%. A 10% ethanol/gasoline or diesel blend will return about 97% of the energy that 100% gasoline provides. The simple math tells you that you don’t as much energy. I had a truck with an E85 engine, it did get a bit more horse power when running E85 fuel, but that’s because you could pump a lot more ethanol blend than gasoline before you hydrolock the cylinders. If it ran E85, it only got about 70% of the mileage I got running gasoline.
@@rickbateman2401 . The benefits of e10 are all in the negative except for those making money out of the government subsidies. E85 on the other hand can actually give more power and economy BUT only if the engine and fuel system is specifically designed for it and the engine is very high compression. Because of the higher octane and cooling effects of e85 or pure alcohol you can run an engine with high compression increased timing and higher boost all of which get more power out of a given amount of fuel. There’s a sweet spot that you can tune an engine to to get the most bang for buck out of any fuel especially high octane fuels. But only race , aircraft, marine and some stationary engines operate in the sweet spot for long enough to show the true benefits, normal vehicles operate over such a wide range of conditions that they rarely maintain the sweet spot for more than a few seconds over a normal twenty to thirty minute drive so any benefit of blended fuels is lost over the majority of the drive and may go into detriment the further away from the sweet spot you need to drive. This sweet spot is why you now have 10 speed automatic transmissions and drive by wire throttle bodies.
@@anomamos9095 I completely agree with the added horsepower claim but there is actually less efficiency. As mentioned, Ethanol/methanol only provides more power because those engines use the same principal as nitromethane dragsters - they both have less power per gallon, but you can pump far more fuel into the cylinder than you can with gas or diesel. Most vehicles are drive by wire now - the last 4 cars I’ve owned did not have a throttle cable, and CVT transmissions are as variable in their drive ratios as it gets but I don’t see us moving to ethanol or methanol for a fuel until somebody figures out how to make it more efficiently. Right now it’s like hydrogen - it’s energy negative.
@@rickbateman2401 . As I said there is a tiny sweet spot where you can actually get more power and economy out of alcohol , US department of defense research docs available on the web to prove it. It is just that 98% of the time even a motor tuned for it won't operate in the sweet spot.
Maybe add something to the fuel to lube the pump a little more for reliability. I wonder if there’s a benefit to this over water meth injectors or if that’s a better option
Correct, always have ur pouring spout on top to start pouring from a new/full drum/can, so air can enter as fuel exits without it having to bubble through from bottom of pouring vessel.
I'd like to see more on this. Maybe drive it for a few months to see what happens. Document and report any changes such as increased / decreased fuel economy, possible damage to fuel system, engine, etc. 90% diesel should be enough to keep things lubricated but Dan Snyder is right, methanol (or any alcohol) absorbs water like crazy. I doubt the water separator would do much good. Something to keep in mind.
Worth it i think for the power gains? If it absorbs water, great, it means the fuel and water will burn together. However i would be concerned with the fuel going off and gluing the fuel system to death over time
towards the end of WW2 the german Wehrmacht converted many of their Diesel trucks to methanol. Diesel was hard to come by and Methanol less so as it was an intermediate product of synthetic fuel production from coal. They put a carburetor on the intake and used the Diesel injection on idle/low load as ignition aid. My grandpa told me about it.
Had a Suzuki side kick knocked like u dribbling a baseball and we fixed it by putting transmission fluid in the fuel tank half quart every fill up by 3 quart u could hardly hear the knock hopes that helps u can always try and see if that will help Meryl out
Methanol and ethanol have lower heat content. To get the same power you need more fuel/alcohol injected. With ethanol blend gasoline the AFR needs to be richened up from 14.7:1 to about 14.15:1. Diesel will be similar.
I saw your seafoam video AGES ago and never knew. Never knew. Now I’m helping a buddy out w his 6.7 and wanting one myself…. Man. Crazy circle it is. 🤘🏻 love your videos bro. Keep it up 🤘🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸
It might be a good idea to add a small percentage of caster oil as you would find in model glow plug engines to protect the fuel pump Keep up the good work
But methanol is most definitely not a lubricant and that is what needs a lubricity enhancer and as for modern diesel ULSD it is a poor lubricant and has a lubricity enhanser added
So bit of history on this idea, people have made their own diesel fuels for a long time, but it was almost a movement in the 1970s when experimenting with WVO because of the fuel shortage and needing a solvent to break up filtered veg oil to get it to flow better. Percentages of anywhere from 2-20% Methanol was a common additive, depending on your locale in the US and time of year. I helped a friend do this with a diesel Merc and he also chose to run 20% in a northern climate, though it is not uncommon for even commercially available diesel to have a methanol blend for colder markets (once upon a time, it was a distinguishing additive between #1 and #2 diesel before advanced blending with various nitrates). How much carbon you see exiting a diesel is largely a factor of burn efficiency. If you're burning closer to peak thresholds, very little carbon/soot exits the tailpipe, you're getting more power out of your fuel, but knock chances are higher under hard use like towing. Thus you will see people under the thinking that having a saturated fuel rate is 'safer' for preventing engine damage on 'tuned' engines, when in reality, they aren't burning all the fuel injected into the cylinder and it's blowing right out the tailpipe.
As far as BTU a gallon. Methanol has about 55% less energy may be why it had the knock sound because its running lean. Maybe modify the injection pump to richen it up a little.
You're right about less energy and with pure methanol he'd definitely need to inject way more and fix timing, but mixed with diesel I believe the idea is the methanol helps oxidize the fuel better so you're burning more of the diesel rather than sending it unburned out the exhaust. It'd be interesting to see how it compares stoichiometrically. A exhaust gas temperature gauge may be a good indicator 😅
Actually it's the opposite. Methanol resistance to detonation/Dieseling is the knock . It's a rapid pressure spike event when the methanol finally lights, it then burns much faster than regular diesel ... Being an oxygenated fuel, it assists the diesel portion with extra oxygen helping lean the mixture and clear up some smoke.
We need some VP racing M5 haha that's what I run in my racing units ...it has just a smidgen of nitro in it 🚀🤠highly highly corrosive though methanol will Reek havac on aluminam and fuel systems..lots of maintenance .
I'd assume with ethanol and methanol being solvents and diesel being a fuel oil, that the oil would dissolve into the ethanol, simlar to what it does in gasoline.... Would also exxplain how something like this *can* work considering a diesel fuel system needs to have at least *some* lubrication to work reliably. it doesn't take much to sieze up an entire fuel system with a solvent for fuel in a diesel engine.
I've been thinking about something like this a lot lately on my weird cummins swap. Did you ever give the snow kit a try? M10 to diesel would get expensive quick but I wonder if a fog system could be a little more sustainable 😂 edit: and better for the fuel system as well of course!
I use a Snow water/meth kit on my '96 K2500. Blue windshield juice works very well to keep EGTs down and adds real seat-of-the-pants boost. Kit has a boost sensor so it can run on your demand setting. I love towing with it.
Just an FYI , those throttle linkages are known for not giving you full throttle. Try looking at it and seeing if it hits the throttle stop on the injection pump.
So there’s many things wrong with this. The main one is the fact that methanol has zero lubricity. So the more methanol you add into a high pressure environment the quicker you will tear up the fuel pump and injectors. Methanol in a diesel should not be directly injected. Should be port injected. You can add enough methanol via port injection to blow out the flame in the cylinder without causing ill effects to the fuel system. People have been doing it for years. The study’s you read were also port injected. Methanol absorbs water and doesn’t separate making it that much worse for diesel fuel systems because it suspends the water evenly throughout the fuel which is bad. One of those moment where you should of talked to a professional. Only a phone call away.
@@dansnyder8186 you have a significant misunderstanding of the effects of alcohol and moisture/water. "Heet" fuel treatment used to remove water from fuel IS methanol. Methanol, in moderation, will allow an engine to burn the water in the fuel system without any issues.
I run 10% methanol in a gas engine for a roughly 30 hp gain but be careful it also increases your head pressure so more isn't better if you value your rings. 10% is pretty safe on a healthy engine. And yes before it's said that is above what the fuel manufacturer puts in the gas at the pump
tip for barn hunters... methanol is hands down the BEST carb cleaner available. nothing else washes that black and brown goop off like methanol. no scrubbing required. its not cheap here anymore(best im seeing is AU90/20L?), but its still better than the crap in a can.
it didn't burn the whole gallon....it returned the fuel to the cars tank. i would imagine an injector timing change would be necessary for it to run better
Germans did exactly this in cold climates and when they could only access water contaminated diesel in the war. They had a lot of diesel planes as well as trucks. Russians used and still use the same method. Methanol is one of the most effective ways to make water be absorbed into the fuel and not be a big problem (until it rusts out a pump anyway). So no fuel bug as no water/fuel layer for the bug to grow. Methanol has less specific energy than diesel, but a greater expansion coefficient, as a fuel replacement option its rubbish volumetrically unless you have massive tanks, like a ship for instance. Buuuut... In low concentrations it vastly improves the atomisation of diesel fuel as it lowers the surface tension of it. This makes combustion more efficient. Here in NZ its often used to get cars that wont pass emissions tests normally due to smoke, more likely to pass by less reputable people. These days Used alongside/instead of acetone to make cooking oil more usable as a biofuel. It can be used as the special additive to turn cooking oil into biofuel. I've used it to treat normal diesel at 1 teaspoon to 2gal. Or in my lingo 0.7ml per litre. A 40litre car tank was 35ml of methanol. 2500litre boat tank was a 2litre bottle of acetone or methanol to treat. Enough to react out any legally allowable water content from a fuel stop plus any condensation from the tank breathing. At 10% I'm guessing that most of the power benefit from running ethanol is starting to be lost by its lower specific energy,and the ability of the pump to get enough fuel delivered. Every engine will have its best value though. P.S. half your oil change interval or even more often as methanol and ethanol both cause a lot more steam to be generated in the combustion process. Which can make it into your oil through blowby and the likes. Aussies used diesahol (looks like milk) as a substitute for diesel as it runs cooler than diesel in the deserts. Upgraded tank sizes to cope with desert distances and lower energy per gal though. Aussies also used LPG Fogging systems to improve power and efficiency of diesels as well. Good luck :)
Any paper, or leather, or maybe even rubber gaskets or parts in your fuel system may shrivel up or disintegrate. In 1980s they put methanol in motor fuel instead of ethanol and most cars with carburetors ( which was most cars 1980 ) had major problems in fuel department. Most GM carburetors used accelerator pumps with piston cup made of rubber or even leather and they all deformed and wouldn't pump any more. I had a carburetor where all the paper material gaskets shrunk. Plus don't come into too much contact with that stuff, not good for you. ( but you know that )
But also should you put additive or two stroke oil or even atf as lubricant for the injection pump and would it still work ? I put half a quart of atf in my truck every three tanks and it’s a 6.0 powerstroke and I haven’t had a bad injector since but I can’t say the same about the head gasket but that what I get for putting big injectors in it at 260 k and raced it a lot the overheated it after 30 k and put the oem injectors back in and now she sits with lifted heads at 306 k but she still runs and I haven’t had the time to work on it yet 😢
pure methanol mixed with some castor 927 two stroke oil will do the trick. 1.5 fl oz to 10 gallons. my bmw drag car runs on straight methanol and the castor oil has saved my engine more than once. i wont run methanol without ever again after the experience. i would bet you could add some used motor oil / corn oil to cut down the methanol and it would last. you just need to get the fuel mix to similar stochiometry as diesel fuel.
At 9 mins in the video and you say it running rough is because you have changed how fast the fuel can detonate so timing is needs but hard in an diesel or change the pump time to suit the fuel time how fast it burns
And this is why people use propane injection on diesels and not methanol. You can control the amount of additional fuel added, and yeah the setup is more expensive, but it just works.
We used to add methanol to our MX bikes, I would add 20% to my YZ250's, and they ran so much better, but than race gas is just that a mix of petrol and methanol.
Ok you have fuel hanging over a motor your not sure will stay together and an open 5 gal of methanol sitting there and the exhaust blowing out of the hood……….what could go wrong?
It depends on your electronics newer diesel engines the electronics can't handle methanol in your diesel.. Back in the nineties I used to run methanol in my cat diesel engines because they had a lot more power And better fuel mileage. One gallon of methanol to every 50 gallons of diesel Did that for 20 years motors lasted longer And ran cleaner
About 35 years ago Detroit Diesel.ran an experimental program for city bus engines running on methanol. These were 6V92 engines. The diesel fuel versions were 277HP with engine life of about 350,000 miles. The methanol engines were also 277HP but required about double the fuel to be injected. The heads looked the same but had glow plugs from the Chev 5.7 diesel. There was a glowplug controller with LEDs that flashed when the glow plugs were energised. The heat of vapourisation is so high with methanol that it would absorb the heat of compression from the air and not fire in a cold engine. The engine running sounded like a blown alcohol drag engine. Once it did a run and the cylinders were well warmed up it idled smooth as silk, for about 2 minutes when it had cooled the cylinders and the rough idle came back.
The early testing gave engine life of 50,000 miles due to the high quantity of fuel being injected washed the cylinder walls. Many additives were tested in the fuel and got engine life up to 100,000 miles. Eventually the engines were converted back to diesel fuel but initially the methanol heads were used. They ran fine during a run on the route, but would not start after being shut off. The fuel system would have to be primed again. The methanol heads were engineeredcto retain heat, which boiled the fuel sitting in the fuel rails. The heads were then replaced with diesel heads and no more problem.
Tractor pullers will be rebuilt fairly often so ring and cylinder wall life is not the same concern as a daily driver.
It was an interesting experiment. The idea had come about to reduce soot emissions in city use. That part was successful. I think diesel engines converted to run on natural gas would be the answer. Large industrial engines can be had in diesel or natural gas fuel versions.
the reason the bottle ran so fast is that its returning the excess back to tank thru the return line
I remember when myth busters did a fuel economy test and all of the results were the same. They ran a small tank similar to this and didnt realize the fuel was returning to the tank. They put the episode out too.
Oops I just said the same thing
@@4x4le remember that i was around 13 years old then and even then i was screaming to the tv
That is 61 bucks in that can? Is that enough for a full pull? Running that fuel takes different jetting I believe than Diesel
Don't you have to raise the compression to get efficiency out of the motor?
the knock on initial start up is likely an airlocked injector since you ran it out of fuel, sometimes reving it will clear it, but its usually easier to just crack the injector lines and let the air bleed off while its running.
You’re probably right.
I drove a Renault built Mack truck, once.
There was a fuel leak SOMEWHERE that we never found.
Didn’t leak fuel, but if the truck sat for a weekend, it lost its prime.
Every time the truck sat for a few days, I had to put the cab up and pump the heck out of the hand primer.
It would knock until fuel was flowing into the return lines.
If I really gave it a good prime, it wouldn’t knock, but it took a long time to wait for that squeak in the lines that said all the injectors were fully primed, and she wouldn’t knock upon startup.
Yep - if you compare 7:58 to any other point after they've revved the tits off it enough to run fuel through the entire system there's a very noticeable difference which would elude to an airlocked injector. Firstly is that really loud knock that could easily be mistaken for a rodknock, but secondly the fact it was misfiring like crazy. I've had the same behaviour out of my Ford KKDA when I did injector seals and one of the injectors had airlocked. That thing made a right knock 'til I gave it a few hits of throttle... Which was kinda required anyway since it really didn't like running on 3 cylinders while that injector was replenishing lol
M10 will more than double your torque output at a given RPM low in the range compared to straight diesel. As you increase RPM, the torque improvement decreases to double the output. As you increase to M20, output advantage drops, M30 drops even more. To get a stable mix, you might try two to one butanol to methanol for the alcohol blend. You might also try lubricity additive like Stanadyne. Watch out for any vehicle fuel components using aluminum: methanol will corrode it severely, so need anti-corrosion additive. Methanol can also eat some seal and oring materials. Need to change out to methanol resistant seals and orings ...
Yuup
Let's not forget that diesel also lubricates many of the fuel injection components
@@ericwieboldt7042 Ultra low sulfur Diesel doesn't have lubricity, a proper additive should always be used.
Low-ash 2 cycle oil for watercraft (TCW3) helps with lubricity.
I've run a water - methanol injection kit on my 600 Signature Series Cummins for over a million miles. Never had an issue with rusting. I use Howes with every fill up.
I recall that, as a truck driver, I used to put 5 gallons of super petrol (gasoline) in a 50 gallon tank of diesel. Made the diesel engine run real well and produced a flame out the exhaust stack about 3 feet long. It was better seen at night.
Didn't have any algae either, did you?
That sounds like a bad idea! Adding even 1 gallon of gasoline to 1,000 gallons of diesel will change the flash point of the fuel.
@grantyentis5507 your obviously not very old. When there was no 'winter diesel ' you put petrol in up to 30% to stop it waxing. It was a proper thing, I had a 93 bmw diesel that told you to do it at anything below -20c.
2006 I had a International 9400 with dual 150 tanks. During winter if I couldn't find anti gel I would use about 2 gallons of regular 87 gasoline. Never had any problems
sounds cool as hell brother
I noticed the heat coming off your head when you were doing the heavy duty ratio calculations for the mixture. I was afraid the fuel might ignite before you got to use it.
Lol, It started out this way and ended up close enough cause the pail was so heavy
It is heavy duty because it's imperial. For every day garage fuel production I'll go for metric.
back in 1986 I rode with a trucker up Cajon Pass in California which is a real bitch in a loaded bottom dump. He had many miles on the engine and it seriously needed a rebuild, but it went up that hill like it wasn't there, 60 mph plus. He had a 20 pound propane bottle on the floor and when he started up the hill, he turned on the propane bottle that had a hose going directly into the air filter, the pyrometer temp went down, the stack was clear, and the speed went up.
Quick tip! When you pour from a 5 gal bucket with a spout, if you lay that bad boy on its side with the spout at the 12 o’clock position and then slowly roll it, it’ll pour ezpz nice and controlled like
For measuring, go metric and use a scale. 1litre =~1kg.
I would add a little bit of ATF in the diesel for a little bit extra lubricity. Just don’t get caught with it in your tank on the road because carbs for mistake it for red diesel for agriculture use.
4:40 Please do not use two diffrent units when caculating a percentage. It should be done either by Volume or by Mass.
I have a water/meth kit on my 6.7 powerstroke. 2 nozzles that add up to 1080 ml/min. Makesa big difference
Devils own injection has 1300ml/min nozzles available ... Try two of those big boys 👍🏻
The methanol super stock diesels use a different cylinder head with spark plugs and if I remember right they change the pistons also to put the combustion chamber in the cylinder head instead of the piston. Basically a gas engine built on a super tough diesel block
😆did you say spark plugs
Yes, apparently they *do* run spark plugs. I’ve been trying to learn just what they do to modify these engines.
The Alcohol Diesels use spark plugs and are not direct injection like diesel. It's a total conversion to a gas engine with spark plugs while using the ultra strong diesel motor to hold the power
@@100pyatt well to begin with, they do that as you can buy 16-20L v8 or v12 engines cheaply, they have high compression ratio, all you need is machine it for spark plug, put injectors in intake and benefit from displacement and compression ratio (no problem for methanol).. not so good for road cars (as engine weights half a ton) but in pulling category where you need power and grip (from weight) it fits well, and is cheaper than modifying stock diesel engine
We use a AEM water meth system on our diesel hauler. It adds quite a bit to the seat dyno.
Mabye put a injector in the intake of even a carb, run the methanol through that way. The diesel might act as a pilot light kinda for the alcohol. Not sure how long the injection pump will last without diesel or oil to lub it. See if you could run a propane mixer on the intake
This experiment is great!
Here in Latvia we use ethanol (on petrol cars) after ethanol chiptuning.
As far as I know my friends Honda is knocking first minutes.
Engine warms up, knocking disappears.
I would say, your methanol knocking really might be due to temperature.
I don't get it, why you dont use LPG as fuel in USA, Octane is 108-113(they mix propane/butane in winter and summer differentially), so my Honda H22A is chiptuned for LPG (liquid petrolium gas) as fuel. If chiptuned, lpg gives more power, than Latvia's petrol (octane 98).
My Honda was champion in local street drag-race.
And Diesel engine can run 50% LPG 50% diesel.
We do that (rarely) that in Latvia as well.
Thanks, interesting innovation from Latvia. 😊
I use ethanol in my car here in the US.
And I have seen a number of trucks running on propane.. it's just not common practice.
My buddy has a lpg/diesel 50/50 system on his logging truck (in the states). The thing is a complete hotrod. He pulls illegally sized loads on the highway all the time.
Isn't that hard to do 300hp in a pd130 just with diesel, even 400, only problem is egt and no nitro
@@Helder_Paulo 450hp here diesel only on compounded pd130 :D I was about to comment that VW Sold T5 Multivan with LPG injection (i think 100% lpg), tho quite rare as you would need to pay more
5:22 heyyyaaa...if you rotate the can so the spout is at the high point (not at the bottom) when you're pouring it outta those cans...it won't slop and splash around so bad, and you get to tip it over further before it comes out too......jus sayin'
Loss of lubrication and the low boiling temps of alcohol also the lower btu of alcohol come to mind as an issue .
Next.... blend methanol with 20% nitromethane and put that with diesel :D
Custom heads with an ignition system is used on those tractors. And the compression ratio is brought way down.
👍🤝
No doubt the system is very well aerated. It will take a fair amount of time to get all the air out of the pump, lines, rail and injectors. You should have refilled system with good diesel, then run it long enough to get all the air out.
I bet much of your fuel was shuttled back to fuel tank, through fuel return.
it's because the compression is so low, it would hydro lock at 40 psi other wise. so they make the connecting rods short enough that it runs on gas and only when the forced induction starts going the ecu sends diesel in.
Two things. Diesel ignites with the heat of high compression so it is a very different fuel to gasoline that requires lower compression and a spark, so methanol is not a replacement fuel for Diesel engine.
The diesel you get in winter in cold climates is not the same as summer diesel as it has anti gelling agents and the like mixed in that may not play well with methanol.
Using kerosene would have been a better choice for the test.
All that said methanol injection at the air intake is a possible benefit as long as the amount is small enough that it doesn’t ignite before the diesel is injected. This can really bump up the power and reduce pollution and reduce the amount of diesel needed to be injected for a cool burn .
If you want economy you need to reduce the fuel injected but that increases heat and pollution, methanol injection cools the charge air as well as reducing the lean burn of the initial fuel spurt.
I’ve never agreed with the idea that mixing methanol or ethanol with gasoline or diesel is more efficient or cleaner. A gallon of ethanol produces about 65% of the energy in a gallon of gasoline or diesel and methanol is only about 50%. A 10% ethanol/gasoline or diesel blend will return about 97% of the energy that 100% gasoline provides. The simple math tells you that you don’t as much energy. I had a truck with an E85 engine, it did get a bit more horse power when running E85 fuel, but that’s because you could pump a lot more ethanol blend than gasoline before you hydrolock the cylinders. If it ran E85, it only got about 70% of the mileage I got running gasoline.
@@rickbateman2401 .
The benefits of e10 are all in the negative except for those making money out of the government subsidies.
E85 on the other hand can actually give more power and economy BUT only if the engine and fuel system is specifically designed for it and the engine is very high compression.
Because of the higher octane and cooling effects of e85 or pure alcohol you can run an engine with high compression increased timing and higher boost all of which get more power out of a given amount of fuel.
There’s a sweet spot that you can tune an engine to to get the most bang for buck out of any fuel especially high octane fuels. But only race , aircraft, marine and some stationary engines operate in the sweet spot for long enough to show the true benefits, normal vehicles operate over such a wide range of conditions that they rarely maintain the sweet spot for more than a few seconds over a normal twenty to thirty minute drive so any benefit of blended fuels is lost over the majority of the drive and may go into detriment the further away from the sweet spot you need to drive.
This sweet spot is why you now have 10 speed automatic transmissions and drive by wire throttle bodies.
@@anomamos9095 I completely agree with the added horsepower claim but there is actually less efficiency. As mentioned, Ethanol/methanol only provides more power because those engines use the same principal as nitromethane dragsters - they both have less power per gallon, but you can pump far more fuel into the cylinder than you can with gas or diesel. Most vehicles are drive by wire now - the last 4 cars I’ve owned did not have a throttle cable, and CVT transmissions are as variable in their drive ratios as it gets but I don’t see us moving to ethanol or methanol for a fuel until somebody figures out how to make it more efficiently. Right now it’s like hydrogen - it’s energy negative.
@@rickbateman2401 . As I said there is a tiny sweet spot where you can actually get more power and economy out of alcohol , US department of defense research docs available on the web to prove it. It is just that 98% of the time even a motor tuned for it won't operate in the sweet spot.
When mixed with fuel it will run lean which is causing the fuel knocking. Needs to be sprayed into the air intake for it to really burn right
I was thinking that you might need to see about changing the injection pump timing if you go with higher mixes.
Yeah I was thinkin that. Could be just a fuel knock from detonation
also if you let it sit for a while it will seperate and when it runs on the pure it will cause issues with injectors pumps and burnt pitons
Maybe add something to the fuel to lube the pump a little more for reliability. I wonder if there’s a benefit to this over water meth injectors or if that’s a better option
Tans fluid works great for upper lube Nd for pumps. Doesnt seperate either.
when poring from that container use spout on opposite side. better control especially new container
Correct, always have ur pouring spout on top to start pouring from a new/full drum/can, so air can enter as fuel exits without it having to bubble through from bottom of pouring vessel.
I'd like to see more on this. Maybe drive it for a few months to see what happens. Document and report any changes such as increased / decreased fuel economy, possible damage to fuel system, engine, etc. 90% diesel should be enough to keep things lubricated but Dan Snyder is right, methanol (or any alcohol) absorbs water like crazy. I doubt the water separator would do much good. Something to keep in mind.
Worth it i think for the power gains? If it absorbs water, great, it means the fuel and water will burn together. However i would be concerned with the fuel going off and gluing the fuel system to death over time
I mean methanol is expensive but some ethanol or e85 with summer blend like a gallon or 2 in your truck would be cool
towards the end of WW2 the german Wehrmacht converted many of their Diesel trucks to methanol. Diesel was hard to come by and Methanol less so as it was an intermediate product of synthetic fuel production from coal. They put a carburetor on the intake and used the Diesel injection on idle/low load as ignition aid. My grandpa told me about it.
Had a Suzuki side kick knocked like u dribbling a baseball and we fixed it by putting transmission fluid in the fuel tank half quart every fill up by 3 quart u could hardly hear the knock hopes that helps u can always try and see if that will help Meryl out
Like dribbling a baseball 😆 might've had a cracked block. Very common
You two looked like Cheech and Chong pouring gas from a trash can into that T-Bird.
Are you planning a part 2 with the other vehicles? I'd like to see that!
Can You tray use gasoline injectors to add metanol to intrake pipe!
I believe it would run better with more fuel, as in adjusting the fuel pump, with more methanol! Have you thought about propane injection??
Methanol and ethanol have lower heat content. To get the same power you need more fuel/alcohol injected.
With ethanol blend gasoline the AFR needs to be richened up from 14.7:1 to about 14.15:1. Diesel will be similar.
I saw your seafoam video AGES ago and never knew. Never knew. Now I’m helping a buddy out w his 6.7 and wanting one myself…. Man. Crazy circle it is. 🤘🏻 love your videos bro. Keep it up 🤘🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸
It might be a good idea to add a small percentage of caster oil as you would find in model glow plug engines to protect the fuel pump
Keep up the good work
Or two stroke oil.
I once ran out of fuel with my volvo 740 diesel but had a can of two stroke oil in the boot, started it and it ran great.
@@BinneReitsma try 50/50two stroke and parafin👍
@@Error2username I don't know how I can paraffin in my area.
That would a waste diesel is a lubricant and the fuel is still mostly diesel so not needed
But methanol is most definitely not a lubricant and that is what needs a lubricity enhancer and as for modern diesel ULSD it is a poor lubricant and has a lubricity enhanser added
How about modern diesel engine? The one with commonrail injector...
get rid of smoke and get more power.? Propane into the intake on top of the diesel. i use it on my 1989 7.3 ford works great.
So bit of history on this idea, people have made their own diesel fuels for a long time, but it was almost a movement in the 1970s when experimenting with WVO because of the fuel shortage and needing a solvent to break up filtered veg oil to get it to flow better. Percentages of anywhere from 2-20% Methanol was a common additive, depending on your locale in the US and time of year. I helped a friend do this with a diesel Merc and he also chose to run 20% in a northern climate, though it is not uncommon for even commercially available diesel to have a methanol blend for colder markets (once upon a time, it was a distinguishing additive between #1 and #2 diesel before advanced blending with various nitrates).
How much carbon you see exiting a diesel is largely a factor of burn efficiency. If you're burning closer to peak thresholds, very little carbon/soot exits the tailpipe, you're getting more power out of your fuel, but knock chances are higher under hard use like towing. Thus you will see people under the thinking that having a saturated fuel rate is 'safer' for preventing engine damage on 'tuned' engines, when in reality, they aren't burning all the fuel injected into the cylinder and it's blowing right out the tailpipe.
As far as BTU a gallon. Methanol has about 55% less energy may be why it had the knock sound because its running lean. Maybe modify the injection pump to richen it up a little.
You're right about less energy and with pure methanol he'd definitely need to inject way more and fix timing, but mixed with diesel I believe the idea is the methanol helps oxidize the fuel better so you're burning more of the diesel rather than sending it unburned out the exhaust. It'd be interesting to see how it compares stoichiometrically. A exhaust gas temperature gauge may be a good indicator 😅
Actually it's the opposite. Methanol resistance to detonation/Dieseling is the knock . It's a rapid pressure spike event when the methanol finally lights, it then burns much faster than regular diesel ... Being an oxygenated fuel, it assists the diesel portion with extra oxygen helping lean the mixture and clear up some smoke.
Add some 2 stroke motor oil to the fuel for extra lubricity to the pump and injectors
We need some VP racing M5 haha that's what I run in my racing units ...it has just a smidgen of nitro in it 🚀🤠highly highly corrosive though methanol will Reek havac on aluminam and fuel systems..lots of maintenance .
I'd assume with ethanol and methanol being solvents and diesel being a fuel oil, that the oil would dissolve into the ethanol, simlar to what it does in gasoline.... Would also exxplain how something like this *can* work considering a diesel fuel system needs to have at least *some* lubrication to work reliably. it doesn't take much to sieze up an entire fuel system with a solvent for fuel in a diesel engine.
Hey Dude!! Pour with the spout at the TOP of the can!!!!!!!! You better try it --- It works!
I've been thinking about something like this a lot lately on my weird cummins swap. Did you ever give the snow kit a try? M10 to diesel would get expensive quick but I wonder if a fog system could be a little more sustainable 😂
edit: and better for the fuel system as well of course!
I use a Snow water/meth kit on my '96 K2500. Blue windshield juice works very well to keep EGTs down and adds real seat-of-the-pants boost. Kit has a boost sensor so it can run on your demand setting. I love towing with it.
You should add 2 stroke oil for additional lubrification, like european Taxi drivers.
What happened to part 2 please
Just an FYI , those throttle linkages are known for not giving you full throttle. Try looking at it and seeing if it hits the throttle stop on the injection pump.
The methanol pulling tractors run on spark plugs 🤦♂️
we need to know what is the most you can add without needing spark
So there’s many things wrong with this. The main one is the fact that methanol has zero lubricity. So the more methanol you add into a high pressure environment the quicker you will tear up the fuel pump and injectors. Methanol in a diesel should not be directly injected. Should be port injected. You can add enough methanol via port injection to blow out the flame in the cylinder without causing ill effects to the fuel system. People have been doing it for years. The study’s you read were also port injected. Methanol absorbs water and doesn’t separate making it that much worse for diesel fuel systems because it suspends the water evenly throughout the fuel which is bad.
One of those moment where you should of talked to a professional. Only a phone call away.
@@TopCorey In Stockholm there are Ethanol busses, strength up Diesel engines running on 95% ethanol and 5% ignition enhancements
@@dansnyder8186 you have a significant misunderstanding of the effects of alcohol and moisture/water. "Heet" fuel treatment used to remove water from fuel IS methanol. Methanol, in moderation, will allow an engine to burn the water in the fuel system without any issues.
It should be a gallon plus 26 oz. Other wise it'll be more than 20 percent alcohol! You should add a little Marvel mystery oil!
start up diesel knock, usually clears with right adatives in fuel
I run 10% methanol in a gas engine for a roughly 30 hp gain but be careful it also increases your head pressure so more isn't better if you value your rings. 10% is pretty safe on a healthy engine. And yes before it's said that is above what the fuel manufacturer puts in the gas at the pump
tip for barn hunters...
methanol is hands down the BEST carb cleaner available. nothing else washes that black and brown goop off like methanol. no scrubbing required.
its not cheap here anymore(best im seeing is AU90/20L?), but its still better than the crap in a can.
you need to hold the 5 gal can the other way...spout on top when pouring
it didn't burn the whole gallon....it returned the fuel to the cars tank. i would imagine an injector timing change would be necessary for it to run better
Black diesel next? With meth?
Used oil thinned down with methanol.
I've done this stuff myself. Just I would love others to see it. I've done propane injection to.
Power Up Gen49D in the fuel will fix any lubricity problem from the methanol.
Yea back in 2000 I went to the semi diesel truck drag in Mexicali and these Mexican guys mixed methanol in their diesel in a 8v92 Detroit
Didn't delay the injection timing any? No need to break a classic diesel car.
Cannot see the pump lasting very long running it that way but definitely gave her some get up and go
Germans did exactly this in cold climates and when they could only access water contaminated diesel in the war. They had a lot of diesel planes as well as trucks. Russians used and still use the same method. Methanol is one of the most effective ways to make water be absorbed into the fuel and not be a big problem (until it rusts out a pump anyway). So no fuel bug as no water/fuel layer for the bug to grow. Methanol has less specific energy than diesel, but a greater expansion coefficient, as a fuel replacement option its rubbish volumetrically unless you have massive tanks, like a ship for instance. Buuuut... In low concentrations it vastly improves the atomisation of diesel fuel as it lowers the surface tension of it. This makes combustion more efficient. Here in NZ its often used to get cars that wont pass emissions tests normally due to smoke, more likely to pass by less reputable people. These days Used alongside/instead of acetone to make cooking oil more usable as a biofuel. It can be used as the special additive to turn cooking oil into biofuel.
I've used it to treat normal diesel at 1 teaspoon to 2gal. Or in my lingo 0.7ml per litre. A 40litre car tank was 35ml of methanol. 2500litre boat tank was a 2litre bottle of acetone or methanol to treat. Enough to react out any legally allowable water content from a fuel stop plus any condensation from the tank breathing. At 10% I'm guessing that most of the power benefit from running ethanol is starting to be lost by its lower specific energy,and the ability of the pump to get enough fuel delivered. Every engine will have its best value though.
P.S. half your oil change interval or even more often as methanol and ethanol both cause a lot more steam to be generated in the combustion process. Which can make it into your oil through blowby and the likes.
Aussies used diesahol (looks like milk) as a substitute for diesel as it runs cooler than diesel in the deserts. Upgraded tank sizes to cope with desert distances and lower energy per gal though. Aussies also used LPG Fogging systems to improve power and efficiency of diesels as well.
Good luck :)
Yes good job showing telling of what you are doing , keep up the good work. See you the next time see ya bye.
Very interesting. Beautiful Mercedes! But why is the steering wheel so crooked?
Greetings from Bad Kreuznach Germany
Any paper, or leather, or maybe even rubber gaskets or parts in your fuel system may shrivel up or disintegrate.
In 1980s they put methanol in motor fuel instead of ethanol and most cars with carburetors ( which was most cars 1980 ) had major problems in fuel department. Most GM carburetors used accelerator pumps with piston cup made of rubber or even leather and they all deformed and wouldn't pump any more.
I had a carburetor where all the paper material gaskets shrunk.
Plus don't come into too much contact with that stuff, not good for you.
( but you know that )
9:50 No you didn't. Most of that went out of the spill rail and back to the main tank
You need a binding agent like acetone. Its foggy bc its not blending
Bet that garage has great smell of diesel and that methanol that combination can't be beat great getting occasional whiffs of that stuff.
This is the only video I can find about this. How has it held up?
But also should you put additive or two stroke oil or even atf as lubricant for the injection pump and would it still work ? I put half a quart of atf in my truck every three tanks and it’s a 6.0 powerstroke and I haven’t had a bad injector since but I can’t say the same about the head gasket but that what I get for putting big injectors in it at 260 k and raced it a lot the overheated it after 30 k and put the oem injectors back in and now she sits with lifted heads at 306 k but she still runs and I haven’t had the time to work on it yet 😢
My bet is its too thin. You can mix some engine oil or even vegetable oil with it to thicken it
Wondering if acetone would
pure methanol mixed with some castor 927 two stroke oil will do the trick. 1.5 fl oz to 10 gallons. my bmw drag car runs on straight methanol and the castor oil has saved my engine more than once. i wont run methanol without ever again after the experience. i would bet you could add some used motor oil / corn oil to cut down the methanol and it would last. you just need to get the fuel mix to similar stochiometry as diesel fuel.
Nice 👍 927 !!! I can smell it now!!!! Headed to the garage to dump some in
Diesel and Methanol or not miscible - you need to use micellar medium to make a micro emulsion.
what are the long term consequences? Any update?
At 9 mins in the video and you say it running rough is because you have changed how fast the fuel can detonate so timing is needs but hard in an diesel or change the pump time to suit the fuel time how fast it burns
And this is why people use propane injection on diesels and not methanol. You can control the amount of additional fuel added, and yeah the setup is more expensive, but it just works.
Isn't this stuff extremely toxic?
Why is there no part 2?
Methanol is no a solution? Not broken some engine parts?
kerosene and propane also,,, don't forget the magical gas's
How about gasoline diesel mixture
Will regular gas unleaded will work mix with it?
They add spark plugs where the fuel injectors used to be they don’t just straight run methanol.
to get a 20% mixture you’re supposed to only do .8 gallons of fuel and 26 ounces of methanol. i do this all the time!
Try running the valve rack !!! Diesels dont run right unless the valves are adjusted properly
We used to add methanol to our MX bikes, I would add 20% to my YZ250's, and they ran so much better, but than race gas is just that a mix of petrol and methanol.
No it's not.
Ok you have fuel hanging over a motor your not sure will stay together and an open 5 gal of methanol sitting there and the exhaust blowing out of the hood……….what could go wrong?
What was the model before the turbo was installed?
Shouldve added a little trans fluid for upper lube
does meth change the ignition point? would that require a change in timing?
Produzco biodiesel y después del proceso hay que lavar pero sucio va mejor .sucio de metanol y sal pero las juntas de la.bomba se secan
I’d love to see this on the Mercedes 3.0crd diesel the went in the Jeep Grand Cherokee WK
Alcohol is good for vehicles that dont get driven alot. The vaporization dries the cylinder walls and increases oil temperatures.
It depends on your electronics newer diesel engines the electronics can't handle methanol in your diesel.. Back in the nineties I used to run methanol in my cat diesel engines because they had a lot more power And better fuel mileage. One gallon of methanol to every 50 gallons of diesel Did that for 20 years motors lasted longer And ran cleaner
So by volume not by mass? Methanol lower weight than diesel
A fuel lift pump pumps more fuel than is needed thus it will bi-pass fuel back to the main tank ..
Can you add methanol to your daily driver right before an emissions test to get better emissions for people that live in stupid cities?
Pre ignition knock
It doesn't have the btus #2 does