The new low-sulfur diesel fuel is now being pumped into your tanks, whether you like it or not. Sure, the '07 vehicles were built to work on the stuff, but what about your non-brand-new truck? We aren ...
Ultra low sulfur diesel (ULSD) is a diesel fuel with a maximum of 15-ppm sulfur content. Diesel engines equipped with advanced emissions after-treatment devices, such as catalyzed diesel particulate ...
From the time the Environmental Protection Agency proposed that ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD) be run in all on-highway diesel vehicles to when it was fully implemented in late 2006, there has been ...
Amsoil's diesel All-in-One fuel additive combines the benefits of Amsoil Diesel Injector Clean, Diesel Cold Flow, and Diesel Cetane Boost in one package. According to the company, the additive ...
Most fleets would confess to using diesel fuel additives from time to time, most likely in the winter to prevent gelling. But there are fleets, lots of them it seems, that regularly treat their fuel ...
EPA required a 97-percent reduction in the sulfur content of highway diesel fuel from its pre-2007 maximum of 500 parts per million (low sulfur diesel, or LSD) to 15 parts per million (ultra low ...
The central truism regarding any fuel additive is that sometimes you need it—and sometimes you don’t. Aside from the untold legions of snake oil substances touted to improve fuel economy, there are ...
In a historic industry move, Cummins, the world’s largest manufacturer of diesel engines, announced its endorsement of two diesel fuel additives: Power Service Diesel Kleen +Cetane Boost and Power ...
Vehicle exhaust includes a variety of emitted particulates including carbon nanotubes, which are worrisome because nanotubes resemble asbestos fibers that can linger in lung tissue. Now a study has ...
Winter’s approach brings truck fueling systems into a different focus. Although fuel filters and water separators get routine checks year round, as ambient temperatures begin to drop, the actual fuel ...
Steam did the heavy lifting of the Industrial Revolution. Then, at the beginning of the 20th century, diesel began to take over the load and to expand into uses that steam wouldn’t have reached, from ...
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