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Offline Suvvey

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Veg Oil conversion
« on: December 02, 2009, 07:13:56 »
At some point next year I am looking to do a dual tank veg oil conversion on my 200tdi Defender to hopefully run on WVO. I priced all the componants up that I want for the system that I think best suits me and I'm quite happy that I know what I need and where it goes in the circuit but was hoping someone may have some examples of what they have done? Especially on a 200tdi as the only guys I know with converted Landys are using 300tdi's, I know there should be no difference in the componants needed but would be interested to see how it was fitted into your engine bay.

Only question I have with the system itself is where to fit the heat exchanger. I know it should be as close to the injection pump as possible but if it is fitted after the lifter pump then both diesel and wvo will be heated. This may not be a problem if I knew it would always run on oil when up to temp but wanted to be able to run it on both fuels just as easily.

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Offline Saffy

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #1 on: December 02, 2009, 17:49:53 »
mines 300tdi dual tank in 110. Modified 90 tank under driver seat area, this is the derv tank, the original rear tank is the SVO tank.  System consists of twin tanks both with independent standard sized filters, electrical solenoid type fuel selection valve, electrical solenoid fuel RETURN valve. 3 way switch (DERV, SVO and PURGE), plate type heat exhanger plumbed into the coolant line.

RUNNING ON DERV:
DERV TANK >>>>DERV FILTER>>>FUEL VALVE>>>>>LIFT PUMP>>>INJECTION PUMP>>>>RETURN VALVE>>>>>>DERV TANK

RUNNING ON SVO:
SVO TANK>>>>>SVO FILTER>>>FUEL VALVE>>>>HEAT EXHANGER>>>>LIFT PUMP>>>INJECTION PUMP>>>RETURN VALVE>>>SVO TANK

RUNNING PURGE (30 SECONDS to purge the fuel ONLY the fuel system of remaining SVO only, DIESEL with it beign returned to SVO tank):
DERV TANK >>>DERV FILTER>>>>FUEL VALVE>>>>LIFT PUMP>>>>INJECTION PUMP>>>> RETURN VALVE >>>> SVO TANK


Important to purge so that the derv tank doesn't get x amount of pure SVO returned to it every switch over, slowly contaminating it.
After purge it needs least a mile or a good few minutes running at high revs  or so to make sure SVO is burned out of the cylinders (when exhaust stops smelling of chips!). The subject is touchy but personally I do not want my TDI to ideally have ANY percentage of svo/wvo in the cylinders on cold start as that in my opinion (and others if you research) will lead to coking and slippery slop of ruining the engine.

This setup needs the lift pump replumbed and it no longer pushes fuel thru either filter but now sucks, so important not to use bleed nipple on filter as it draws in air!. A weak/old lift pump may struggle to pull thick cold SVO, so perfromance will be down (top speed/ lack of power on hills). When performance dips in cold weather it's time to not be using 100% SVO and use a derv/svo mix.

Would be nice to valve the coolant line of the heat exchanger so it can be isolated because I have had issues when running derv in both tanks and the diesel getting heated so much after several hours running that it effects the performance power/mpg (has only happened twice on long trips).
Recommend proper LR filters and not mess around with crappy inline mesh/paper filters. Recommend carrying a couple spare filters in truck.
 
For me the teething problems after setup where mostly borne from bad joints/mating between different fuel lines... hoses get crushed or leak or draw in air.

Recommend separate return and fuel selection solenoid valves because the all in one valves can't be set in purge arrangement.
Do not cut corner and take easy route of looping/teeing the return line... it means the system will not flush svo out on chang over unless you running for 10's miles - rubbish situation. Return the fuel line properly and the flush is quick and pretty clean.
Recommend an alarm on the curtosey lamp circuit which sounds if yuo open door with and truck still in SVO/WVO... a reminder to flush the system. Before fitting alarm I have forgotten to switch over fuel and flush long enough and when it's 100% svo in the winter and your camped in middle of woods ...it aint gonna start!



« Last Edit: December 02, 2009, 17:55:02 by Tanglefoot »
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Offline Suvvey

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #2 on: December 02, 2009, 23:05:51 »
Cheers for that. I have to admit that I'd totally forgotten that the Derv filter is after and not before the lifter pump :oops:. I wanted to keep the derv filter just for derv so will probably replumb the lifter pump as you have said.

Planning on having a heated filter for the WVO as well as another heat exchanger closer to the pump. From what you've said have you put yours before the lifter pump so that just the aux tanks fuel is heated and not both? I have read some reports that heating of your derv can help performance and MPG but personally I don't like the idea. Maybe a little heat in cold weather but seeing as you are trying to get the oil as hot as possible it doesn't seem wise to put the derv through the same route :?

Also how much has the flow of coolant to your heater matrix been disrupted since fitting your heat exchanger? Defender heaters really don't have enough spare heat to go sharing it with anything else :roll:

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Offline Saffy

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #3 on: December 03, 2009, 00:33:19 »
Cheers for that. I have to admit that I'd totally forgotten that the Derv filter is after and not before the lifter pump :oops:. I wanted to keep the derv filter just for derv so will probably replumb the lifter pump as you have said.

Planning on having a heated filter for the WVO as well as another heat exchanger closer to the pump. From what you've said have you put yours before the lifter pump so that just the aux tanks fuel is heated and not both? I have read some reports that heating of your derv can help performance and MPG but personally I don't like the idea. Maybe a little heat in cold weather but seeing as you are trying to get the oil as hot as possible it doesn't seem wise to put the derv through the same route :?

Also how much has the flow of coolant to your heater matrix been disrupted since fitting your heat exchanger? Defender heaters really don't have enough spare heat to go sharing it with anything else :roll:
Bare in mind the heat exchanger does nothing needful other than once things are warmed up it gives the LIFT pump an easier time. The excess fuel returned from the IP is 'hot' from the HE because it doesn't stick around in the IP long enough and will gradually warms up the fuel in the tank and this again will give the lift pump an easier time with the lower viscosity warm oil. The heat exchanger doesn't actually have any value beyond that as the injection pump internals and therefore the fuel passing into it will become the same temperature as that big lump of metal that the IP is made of. It's been described elsewhere to imagine a teaspoon of very hot veg oil being tipped on a stone cold cast iron frying pan... that oil will take on the pans temp soon as it hits it, so the sip of fuel that actually passes though the injection pump takes on the temperature of the 'warmed'  working pump internals i.e if it's hotter oil entering it will cool down to the IP temp, if it's colder oil entering it will be warmed to working temp of the I.P.
So in theory if the lift pump was man enough to pump thick stone cold SVO (which I reality it can to a large degree) then you do not really need a heatchanger. Again this is a subject of debate and I am just relaying the thinking that I latched on to because it seems logical.

That said, a filter heat exchanger is good idea and I suspect in real world it's all you would need. THe best arrangement would be a coolant heated HE passing through a fuel tank so switch over when the tank of fuel is up to temp. That is a popular method in the USA, if you research their setups the HE is usually in or at the fuel tank and they have insulated coolant pipes running from rear up to engine bay (that's the bit I don't fancy!).

Yes only the SVO fuel passes though the heat exchanger on mine.
No, never noticed any difference in heat matrix output. I originally installed the heat exchanger in parallel to the heat matrix, meaning it had T pieces in inlet and outlet hoses, this is a common arrangement in conversions on other vehciles. BUT... later realised that the landrover heat system is ALWAYS passing coolant though the heater matrix regardless of cabin control. Whereas other vehicles often control the flow of coolant thru matirx via the cabin heater settings so a parallel connection is needed if driver turns heat to' cold'. So on hind sight it is much better to put the plate HE in series on one line of the heater matrix in landrover installations because the flow is always there regardless of hot/cold setting and you end up using less joints, cutting less pipework and therefore less potential failure points.

Infrared temperature probe/sensor is good tool to buy/borrow (maplins sell em) when setting up an install as you can point and click at various areas and get an idea of temperature around the engine bay and system. You can see the IP pump external casting showing pretty much the same temp as the coolant hoses. You can check the H.E temp in relation to  coolant hoses, input fuel line compared to outlet of H.E etc etc.

The standard 'hard' fuel lines are pain to mate to, they also become soft when hot oil is passing through, not normally a problem but if you got a joint on one that uses a compression clip it can crush the pipe and cause problems that are right pain to find cause of.
« Last Edit: December 03, 2009, 00:41:24 by Tanglefoot »
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Offline Suvvey

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #4 on: December 03, 2009, 19:02:31 »
Bare in mind the heat exchanger does nothing needful other than once things are warmed up it gives the LIFT pump an easier time.
 :-k

Most of the research I've done on this and people I have spoken to are quite adamant that the oil needs to be as hot as possible to ensure proper combustion, prevent coking of the cylinders,  seepage of the unburnt vegetable oil into to sump as well as premature pump failure.

I did think about fitting a 90 tank or something similar out of sight under the truck but have decided (at the moment) to go for a 50lt removable tank in the boot for the wvo because I wanted to keep the derv side of things as original as possible, to help to keep the fuel warmer. Also because this is my daily ride and it's daily job is running me the 6 miles to work and back therefore not getting time to warm up enough for the switch over to wvo :roll: So would like to keep the same range on deisel that I already have. Besides 50 lt should give me over 350 miles of cheap/free motoring and a couple of jerry cans will almost double it again. Also keeping oil rather than derv in the boot seemed the least smelly option :lol: That being said I would be interested in any pics you might have of your 90 tank set up. Do you fill it from under the drivers seat?
« Last Edit: December 03, 2009, 19:04:56 by Suvvey »

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Offline Saffy

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #5 on: December 03, 2009, 20:41:27 »
Most of the research I've done on this and people I have spoken to are quite adamant that the oil needs to be as hot as possible to ensure proper combustion, prevent coking of the cylinders,  seepage of the unburnt vegetable oil into to sump as well as premature pump failure.
Erm...well the engine needs to be up to temperature for sure before switching over or it possible to suffer long term with polymerization, coking, piston ring wear, loss of compression and eventual failure if vegoil is injected through cold injectors onto cold engine pistons. But actual fuel temp being injected is irrelevant!  Think about it, like said the fuel will take on what ever temperature the Injection pump is at regardless what the HE did to it before hand. Landrover TDi's are fitted with Bosch injection pumps, these are VERY tolerant to cold vegoil. It will go through further temp changes after the IP from the fuel lines and hot injectors then into very hot cylinders! Really... the HE on the fuel line is not exactly necessary with a Landrover Tdi. But including a GOOD heat exchanger in the system will help ease winter clogging and reduce stress on the lift pump. Good heat exchanger = flat plate design not glow plug heaters.

I got most my theory and research from here http://www.vegetableoildiesel.co.uk/forum/index.php
Some of my measurements of engine bay...
Prior to install - temperatures measured around the engine of the truck then up to operating temp. Infrared thermometer used:
Injectors: 84 deg C average
Injector pipes near injector union: 64 degC average
IP PUMP INLET : 50 DEG C
IP PUMP OURLET: 50 DEG C
IP PUMP BODY: 60DEG
LIFT PUMP: 41 ?
FUEL FILTER CANISTER: 50 DEG C
HEATER IN /OUT PIPES : 86 DEG C
CYLINDER HEAD: 95 DEG C AVERAGE ON FUEL SIDE

That being said I would be interested in any pics you might have of your 90 tank set up. Do you fill it from under the drivers seat?




Yeah I lift the seat and slid the panel and fill up that way. Because it's the Derv tank I do not have to fill it that often so it's not a regular drama. I have CSW 5 door 110 so that ruled out the external filler cap behind the driver door. So my old style 90 tank was modified by cutting off and plating the existing filler on tank. The filler/cap neck relocating to a suitable location on the top. The storage box panels under the driver seat had to be cut/removed to allow tank to fit and tank had to be bracketed. I originally bought a series military tank to fit there as that what people said would fit.... those people where talking out their butts.. Only way a series tank will fit if it hangs down lower than the bottom of chassis rail!
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Offline bogie

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #6 on: December 04, 2009, 17:36:39 »
This all seems a lot of hassle to run on veg oil.Ive been running on veg oil for 6 years with a 200 and no convertion! I did use wvo but by the time i had filtered the crap out,it worked out i was paying around 75p a litre.I now just go asda ,83p a litre and no mess!!!!! Just run on 60% veg &40%diesel or 75%veg & 25% petrol in the cold. In the warm weather you can run 80% veg no problem. A damn sight easier than all that other rubbish!!!!
1968 SERIES 2A ,200TDI TUNED,RANGE ROVER AXLES,ONE TON SHACKLES,CPC PARAS,ES3000,POLYBUSHED,ANACONDAS.                     1970 SERIES 2A, 200TDI TUNED,5 SPEED LT77 WITH LT230S TRANSFER BOX 1.211 RATIO.ZEUS DISKS ALLROUND.ES3000,MODIFIED 90 TANK,3.5 DIFFS.

Offline Saffy

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #7 on: December 04, 2009, 18:24:29 »
One of the trends I notice with age is that no matter what there will always be someone that comes along and says "poopoo that.... I never had any problem". I know for sure there is someone out there right now (maybe they are in bogie's world) stating something like "and I play russian roulette all the time and never had a problem". I can only hope with age that I learn to sprinkle the pinch of salt without rising to troll bait.
« Last Edit: December 04, 2009, 19:04:40 by Tanglefoot »
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Offline Suvvey

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #8 on: December 04, 2009, 18:47:36 »
Bogie- I'm hoping to get my WVO for next to nothing or maybe cheaper :twisted: So it seems to me (and many others) to make perfect sense to run on 100% whenever possible. I also tried running my previous truck on a SVO/Diesel mix and to be honest it worked fine too but I only tried this for one warm summer and then heard far to many woe stories to keep it up long term.

Personally to me running long term on a high percentage mix throughout the year with high risks and limited savings seems like a 'rubbish' way of doing things. But of course I would be far to polite to post it in someone else's thread :-.  I might offer my opinion......
« Last Edit: December 04, 2009, 19:22:44 by Suvvey »

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Offline Mutz

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #9 on: December 04, 2009, 20:02:23 »
Tanglefoot, you seem to have done a lot of research into this and everything you talk about sounds quite logical.

Like the 2nd tank setup.

I hope to go veg when i get mine back on the road so have been watching this (and other veg threads) with interest.

No room for a 2nd tank in a 90 tho so mine would have to be in the rear, not wanting to put a td5 tank on.

As Suvvey is a mate im letting him sort his out first and iron probs out then copy his set up :afro:

Think i would rather listen to someone who has done research rather than; chuck it in itll work.
 
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Offline bogie

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #10 on: December 06, 2009, 17:29:49 »
As i said,6 years no problems,same engine. Used to pay 27p a litre but like everything else it goes up! Save around £8 every fill up,on series tank. I think it speaks for its self!
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Offline Suvvey

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #11 on: November 21, 2010, 18:30:10 »
WELL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It's been nearly a year since I started this thread and I've no idea if any of you are still watching this (or could even care less :lol:) but I can finaly state that the veg is in and working a dream :dance: Infact I was amazed that it all worked fine the very first time I switched it over :shock: Just a couple of small air leaks, one from the diesel filter and one from the WVO filter but they are both now sorted. Although even when all the new fuel lines were completely empty (inc diesel) at the first start up the good old lump still seemed to chug away quite happily seemingly on thin air (hmmmmm now maybe thats a conversion for the future :-k :lol:)
I've read a lot of posts about people not being able to stop smiling when they eventually take the plunge and get it running. I always assumed this was more metaphorical but it seems not. BIG CHEESEY GRIN every time I flick that switch  :grin:. I'm sure it will wear off eventually :roll:
Luckily I've got a mate that is supplying me with the WVO free of charge and already have getting on for 200 filtered litres stockpiled up as well as the 50 in the aux tank but I have just started to thin it with a little diesel now that the cold weather is forecast for next week.
So thanks to those that have helped with advise and examples of their work and hopefully I can do the same for others now.

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Offline crazymac

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Re: Veg Oil conversion
« Reply #12 on: November 22, 2010, 13:23:31 »
I'm still watching!! I've got a twin tank system to fit soon to my 300 Disco, just need to sort a second tank as the one I have (bought from a guy that was going to put it in a Transit) is too big.
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