paulajayne
Well-Known Member
I have just got 80 litres of red for our boat heating.
Fambridge Yacht Haven price £1.78 / litre.





Fambridge Yacht Haven price £1.78 / litre.
Cheaper to buy white from a garage if you drive to the boat.
Being doing that for years. Far more convenient for us sailboats.Cheaper to buy white from a garage if you drive to the boat.
White is red without the die. There might be a small amount of 'special' non biofuel manufactured, but ask your supplier to guarantee the biofuel content and watch the reaction.Doesn't white contain biofuel that rots the joints and gaskets in your engine?
Actually.... Depends where it comes from. At one fuel depot (not terminal, before an Oil Major decides to sue me!) that supplies some marine pumps near Gloucester they have a slops tank that pumps all the sh1t from the delivery hose spills (Kero, bio,red, white) into the red bunker tanks complete with water and associated crap.White is red without the die. There might be a small amount of 'special' non biofuel manufactured, but ask your supplier to guarantee the biofuel content and watch the reaction.
I've not witnessed cars dropping rotten joints and gaskets all over the highway. Have you?
Mdl announced their marine diesel will not contain any bio. Premier put a treatment in theirs. Some red can have up to 10%.White is red without the die. There might be a small amount of 'special' non biofuel manufactured, but ask your supplier to guarantee the biofuel content and watch the reaction.
I've not witnessed cars dropping rotten joints and gaskets all over the highway. Have you?
Nope.So riddle me this, Marina has tank full of diesel, surely they buy it and then store it, i.e. agree a price and pay to bunker the fuel... So until they refuel, they have a tank brought at price X. They seem to be now selling it at at the new prices even though they have already brought it, seems like some serious profiteering going on at the moment![]()
Make me wonder when was the last time an engine was supplied with rubber seals. Nitrile seems to have been the standard for a lot of years anyway so probably affects fewer people that it may at first seemnew internal nitrile seals as the bio eats the older rubber ones
Mostly the pump owners don't have a clue what they're pumping.
I Googled the different types of rubber and found a list of 20. Epdm, butyl, silicone,neoprene, polyurethane etc. So who really knows what rubber seals are made of?Make me wonder when was the last time an engine was supplied with rubber seals.
I reached that conclusion a few years ago when I asked about FAME content. It was evident the retailer at that time did not understand the question.
So I assume the worst and use a fuel additive to try to reduce the risk of fuel issues .
Looks like its going to be expensive for motor boat owners this year.