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  #1  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:03 PM
Waitn For The Bus All Day
 
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What to do about HIGH diesel

Anybody have any ideas what we can do about the high cost of diesel? I know you're all going to say write the legislators but there has got to be something else. Try and get the truckers behind us maybe?

I am so sick of buying this overpriced fuel. I do burn WVO in one of my cars but I also have a truck that I use for my business thats a diesel burner.

HHO production and higher tax on diesel cannot be the only culprits. There is something else behind this, trust me.

Guys, this is so ridiculous. We've all got to band together somehow and get this situation under control. The oil companies are so outta line. RUG has dropped to $2.35 today and diesel is still hanging at $2.85!!!

I am seriously considering getting rid of one of my diesel cars and buying a gasser like a Toyota or something. There are used 30 MPG vehicles out there that are priced about the same as my 240.

Frustrated,

Bill

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  #2  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:09 PM
Hatterasguy's Avatar
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Nothing really, get a gas car next time around is about all we can do.

I guess if you have a VW TDI that gets over 40 the numbers still work. But these old MB's get mid 20's, heck mine get low 20's. The numbers just don't work.

Old MB's only get good fuel mileage on ebay.
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  #3  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:15 PM
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Isn't diesel (basically kero) used for heating oil? Figure the jack the price up for the soon to happen winter...

Just brew your own if you have the capacity.
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  #4  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:23 PM
Waitn For The Bus All Day
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hit Man X View Post
Isn't diesel (basically kero) used for heating oil? Figure the jack the price up for the soon to happen winter...

Just brew your own if you have the capacity.
Can't be HHO alone keeping the price up. .50 more a gallon is just too much to justify.

If someone who lives in my area brews their own, drop me a PM. I'd love to see how its done first hand. Read all the bio forums but nothing as good as someone actually showing you. I've got plenty of room here for the setup and also have 55 gal. WVO that I've been blending. Bio seems a better bet for winter than a blend.

Cheers,

Bill
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  #5  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:34 PM
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They get away with it as they can.

Also they "speculate" due to playing around in the middle east... Iran, Iraq, potential for hurricanes, that BP pipeline, etc.
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  #6  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:39 PM
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In my case even getting "only" 20 is a good deal as the gasser taken off the road gets 10

Anyway I see it is alternate fuel streams are the only other option (W/SVO,. Biodiesel, JetA with lubricants?).

I have no clue why diesel is so high seing as it's lower on the distillation tree.
Also, anyone in Sac. CA doing Biodiesel here? I too would like to see a setup.
-nB
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  #7  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:50 PM
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Has anyone tried a gasifier,the WWII wood kilns used to produce gas?
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  #8  
Old 09-15-2006, 06:58 PM
Craig
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Does anyone here seriously think they are saving money by driving 20 year old german luxury cars? If you just want to save money, go buy a 5 year old honda civic that gets 35 mpg. Even with cheap diesel fuel, the benz is always going to be more expensive to drive and maintain than MANY other cars. If you want to tell your wife that this little hobby is about saving money, have a ball (guys have been using that story to buy motorcycles for years). But let's not kid ourselves, this is nothing more than an expensive hobby, regardless of the cost of fuel. If you need a truck for business, fuel is just another expense that's going to keep going up.
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  #9  
Old 09-15-2006, 07:03 PM
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For those who intend to run WVO or bioD, yes the intent is to save money on fuel by buying a 20 year old MB diesel.

Otherwise, we are indeed getting screwed at the moment.

http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/twip/twip_distillate.html

Compare the spot prices to on-the-road diesel. There's little if any correlation. The prices have remained relatively fixed, and the spot market has steadily decreased. I highly doubt anyone has been buying 3,6,9 month futures of the stuff to suggest such a twisted trend.
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  #10  
Old 09-15-2006, 07:16 PM
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Nothing you can do, Bill, aside from avoid high-consumption driving, but I'm sure you know all that. Biodiesel is an option, although something I'm personally taking a "wait and see" stance on. Some people have had success making their own. I'll take the diesel prices for now and see where this all goes, personally, but that's my choice.

There's much hullabaloo about gasoline prices dropping now, but it's nothing permenant and it's too bad that everyone is so excited about it. It's going to do nothing but stall the absolute urgency of the situation, which means it will stall any progress towards reducing fossil fuel dependency. Saw a good editorial toon the other day ... it showed a guy with an SUV, filling it up and looking at the price saying something like "these prices are awful ... I'm going to buy a smaller car!" and then "scratch that, I'm going to get a bike!" ... next frame, there's a man climing up on the marque putting up a lower gas price ... the guy filling up the SUV, looking at the lower price, says "nevermind ... " while smiling. That's it. The price dips are hollow comfort.

So don't feel too bad ... at least our prices have been steadily high, without false hopes in between.

I wish I had an answer. If I did, I'd not be working where I'm working for the salary I'm getting.

Personally, I think it would be best for the economy if gas prices where set free. Let 'em rise. Focus on lowering diesel prices to keep the transportation industry in control. And that's not me being selfish about my diesel. I don't care if they keep passenger diesel drivers paying high. Yeah, it sucks, but the trickle down of high transport costs are more worrisome. We need avg drivers, diesel and gasoline, to get used to paying more and driving less. It's the only way anything will change.
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  #11  
Old 09-15-2006, 07:22 PM
ForcedInduction
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Get a 190D 2.2. I've seen peoiple post that they get up to 40mpg.
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  #12  
Old 09-15-2006, 07:42 PM
Craig
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BodhiBenz1987 View Post
Personally, I think it would be best for the economy if gas prices where set free. Let 'em rise. Focus on lowering diesel prices to keep the transportation industry in control. And that's not me being selfish about my diesel. I don't care if they keep passenger diesel drivers paying high. Yeah, it sucks, but the trickle down of high transport costs are more worrisome. We need avg drivers, diesel and gasoline, to get used to paying more and driving less. It's the only way anything will change.
I think that's the bottom line, the current US consumption is not sustainable and higher prices are probably they only way to lower consumption in the long term. The real problem is inflation, if you allow energy costs to rise too quickly, it will feed inflation. The only solution I see, is to let prices drift up to a reasonable level over several years. If you allowed fuel prices to double over 5 or 10 years, you would give the market time to respond without doing too much damage to the economy. It's an interesting problem, even if you don't consider the political part.

Higher prices are also the only thing that will drive alternate fuels (bio-diesel). Currently bio-diesel costs about the same as petro-diesel, so there is no economic incentive to get serious about it. Aside from the lunatic fringe that is making their own fuel, no-one is going to save money by using bio-diesel until the cost of petro-diesel increases significantly. I don't know what price level would actually result in widespread use of bio-diesel, but I suspect it would have to be in the $5/gallon range.
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  #13  
Old 09-15-2006, 07:56 PM
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Craig, my hat to your analysis. It is one of the best i've read about what a good politians should do.
Unfortunately, the bozos in power right now will use all the tricks in the book to lower the prices of gas until they will be in a monumental crisis. I will expect the prices to be kept artificially low until next summer. Then brace yourself America, the reckoning will come. And that ain't gonna be pretty.
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  #14  
Old 09-15-2006, 07:59 PM
Craig
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I will expect the prices to be kept artificially low until next summer.....
At least until after the election.
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  #15  
Old 09-15-2006, 08:02 PM
Waitn For The Bus All Day
 
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Originally Posted by Craig View Post

Higher prices are also the only thing that will drive alternate fuels (bio-diesel). Currently bio-diesel costs about the same as petro-diesel, so there is no economic incentive to get serious about it. Aside from the lunatic fringe that is making their own fuel, no-one is going to save money by using bio-diesel until the cost of petro-diesel increases significantly. I don't know what price level would actually result in widespread use of bio-diesel, but I suspect it would have to be in the $5/gallon range.
Hmmm. A bright spot. Thanks Craig. I needed that.

Actually my TD has been great cheap transportation so I wouldn't call it an expensive hobby. Can't see myself driving a Honda. Wife has owned Hondas as long as I've known her and they're great cars but with one major drawback. I can hardly sit in the seat. No leg room! Made for short commuters.

Bodhi, you make a lot of sense. Especially your fossil fuel dependency statement and the fact that our prices have remained high not giving us any false hopes like all the gassers are getting for the moment. Right too about the trucking industry. Although groceries are cheaper to go and get, the food itself isn't going down in price.

Anybody know where I can get a 190d 2.2? Boy, I bet my 240 would feel like a top fuel car compared to the 190.

Cheers,

Bill

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