โJan-14-2014 09:27 AM
โJan-22-2014 02:25 PM
โJan-22-2014 10:51 AM
โJan-21-2014 10:38 PM
wny_pat wrote:Refining crude oil is a lot more complex than depicted on a graph or tally sheet. Some of the incident refined product, like gasoline, is used in the refining process. The refineries also focus the process to make products that have the most payback like aromatics and other petrochemicals. It would be difficult for anyone other than a refinery bean counter to say, absolutely, what the price is of the various products produced.mike mck wrote:and you are wrong.fordsooperdooty wrote:
Between 40 and 70% of all vehicles sold in Europe are diesels, in the USA market 2 to 3% of cars are diesel.
Euro diesels are fuel efficient, reliable, quiet and diesel is 33% more efficient than gasoline..which more than offsets the price difference because of an average of 10 miles per gallon more with diesel.
A small drawback is that although diesel has a higher energy output per gallon than gasoline, it takes approximately 25 percent more crude oil to make a gallon of diesel oil than it does to make a gallon of gasoline.
An interesting factoid about Diesel taking 25% more crude to Make a gal of diesel than gasoline. All I have ever been able to find is a barrel (42 gal) makes 20 gallons of gasoline 7 gallons of Diesel and the bal various petroleum products.
http://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/index.cfm?page=oil_refiningYou can only get 19 gallons of gasoline out of a barrel, but there is still a lot left in the barrel to give you other stuff. And you can get 10 gallons of diesel out of the same barrel, and it does not cost as much to get that 10 gallons of diesel that it cost to get the gasoline. The gasoline takes a lot more processing, so diesel is cheaper to get out.
โJan-21-2014 08:48 PM
mike mck wrote:and you are wrong.fordsooperdooty wrote:
Between 40 and 70% of all vehicles sold in Europe are diesels, in the USA market 2 to 3% of cars are diesel.
Euro diesels are fuel efficient, reliable, quiet and diesel is 33% more efficient than gasoline..which more than offsets the price difference because of an average of 10 miles per gallon more with diesel.
A small drawback is that although diesel has a higher energy output per gallon than gasoline, it takes approximately 25 percent more crude oil to make a gallon of diesel oil than it does to make a gallon of gasoline.
An interesting factoid about Diesel taking 25% more crude to Make a gal of diesel than gasoline. All I have ever been able to find is a barrel (42 gal) makes 20 gallons of gasoline 7 gallons of Diesel and the bal various petroleum products.
โJan-21-2014 06:43 PM
mlts22 wrote:Soon they will leave the diesel behind and go back to real trucks. The women are getting sick of all the oil on the rug.
I'm noticing that in every segment of RV-ing, be it tow vehicles, or motorhomes, diesel engines are appearing as options (such as the one on the 1500 Dodge.)
I wonder if this is something that is here to stay, or if it is something similar to the 1970s where we had diesel cars as an option, but eventually almost everyone switched back to gassers.
Opinions? Think this is something permanent, or just a fad?
โJan-21-2014 06:09 PM
Oaklevel wrote:
Diesel engines in the newer trucks do not need an idle time.... actually leaving a big truck diesel running (not a small diesel) can be more efficient than cutting it off.
โJan-21-2014 03:48 PM
Chris Bryant wrote:
I find it interesting that the gasoline engines are adopting more diesel like attributes, like direct injection. I believe several makers have gasoline engines that convert to compression ignition at highway speeds in development.
โJan-21-2014 02:23 PM
ol Bombero-JC wrote:atreis wrote:
Diesels have greater mpg which makes them appealing to some even when it doesn't actually save money - fuel cost is higher. They're also nicely torquey (although electric motors are even better).
Modern diesels are also very different from the dirty, noisy ones that didn't last long in the 70s. Fuel is cleaner and emission standards are higher now. They're less noisy than they were in the 70s, but still noisier than gas though.
Go back and re-read the OPs post.
You didn't answer his question - or offer an opinion of the diesel "fad"..:S
~
โJan-20-2014 04:01 PM
Supercharged wrote:mlts22 wrote:Few more years and than all are switched back to gas to save money and not have so much smell, cost of repairs, oil on the feet.
I'm noticing that in every segment of RV-ing, be it tow vehicles, or motorhomes, diesel engines are appearing as options (such as the one on the 1500 Dodge.)
I wonder if this is something that is here to stay, or if it is something similar to the 1970s where we had diesel cars as an option, but eventually almost everyone switched back to gassers.
Opinions? Think this is something permanent, or just a fad?
โJan-20-2014 03:57 PM
fordsooperdooty wrote:
Between 40 and 70% of all vehicles sold in Europe are diesels, in the USA market 2 to 3% of cars are diesel.
Euro diesels are fuel efficient, reliable, quiet and diesel is 33% more efficient than gasoline..which more than offsets the price difference because of an average of 10 miles per gallon more with diesel.
A small drawback is that although diesel has a higher energy output per gallon than gasoline, it takes approximately 25 percent more crude oil to make a gallon of diesel oil than it does to make a gallon of gasoline.
โJan-20-2014 10:09 AM
atreis wrote:
Diesels have greater mpg which makes them appealing to some even when it doesn't actually save money - fuel cost is higher. They're also nicely torquey (although electric motors are even better).
Modern diesels are also very different from the dirty, noisy ones that didn't last long in the 70s. Fuel is cleaner and emission standards are higher now. They're less noisy than they were in the 70s, but still noisier than gas though.
โJan-20-2014 03:26 AM
โJan-20-2014 12:38 AM
Homer wrote:
IMHO they are always looking for a way to change the rules of the game. Don't get me wrong I love Diesels. However, the upkeep is much higher, fuel is higher,it will require a lot of certification of mechanics to work on them, (that is going to increase the price of service). While longegivity is better, the fuel mileage has come way down on the bigger diesels. Fuel prices will probably rise substantially as diesel fuel competes with heating oil for market.
โJan-19-2014 06:54 PM