Cummins12V98 wrote:
sayoung wrote:
Cummins12V98 wrote:
"What would you do in a state park?"
Clean what I could and throw it in a dumpster then kick gravel over it. What do you do every place your auto drips fluids on the ground?
You can't make this **** up ! My friend owns a sawmill/treating plant and during one state environmental inspection the lady inspector fined him because she found a millwright replacing a bad hydraulic hose that had ruptured and fluid was on the ground where he was working. She then tells him he could better control the dust on his plants dirt drives by spraying oil. The environment folks can be abserd
I know it's insane! Look what's poured on the roads to make a chip seal surface. Too many out their having to justify their jobs.
Other than both being petroleum based products, they are nothing alike.
Asphalt is the thick solid or semisolid remains of a barrel of oil after the higher value items are distilled off (asphalt is still valuable)
Motor or hydraulic oil will stay liquid at any reasonably expected outdoor temperatures. Asphalt will solidify at normal temps.
In the old days, they would mix in a little naphtha which would liquify it to allow them to work with it. If they wanted slower solidification, they would sometimes use diesel/kerosene. But that is considered bad form because the naphtha would evaporate into the air. For chip seal (and most asphalt applications), it's pretty much all heated to achieve a liquid state and as soon as it cools, it solidifies. Cold patch uses an emulsion technique to keep it workable.
That said, I do recall as a kid, we spread used motor oil on the dirt road out front to help keep dust down.
Back to the original question: In addition to viscosity changes making the pump work harder, might also be a weak battery. The cold will reduce the amps that the battery puts out, so that can also slow down the system and potentially trip the breaker.