Pendleside Festive Dingbats. Cd 6/1/25
Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by bryntaylor. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.�800, I think they are trying it on.
It all depends on how old the car is, ans how much you value it. If it's a bit of a nail, then top and go. However if a newish car then the best advice would be to drain the tank. There will not be a drain plug, because they cost money for manufacturers to fit, so you have two choices. Find where the fuel supply comes into the engine compartment, split the pipe at a joint, and using an electrical pump, (few quid from local scrapyard) and a big bucket, suck the contents rom the tank, but filler capoff first.
The other method is to lift the back of the car, find the outlet from tank, and split it there with a bit of gravity it will drain.
I imagine the local dealers are imagining you have run contam into the engine, so they are covering their backs. Try ringing and asking how much for just a tank drain, no other work.
I used to do recovery, and at least one per day would do contam(inated fuel). The charge was �100, with a gallon of fresh.
Good luck
bryntaylor, You need to say how old the car is. If it is a new type engine(common rail fuel system) the fuel pump will be damaged by petrol. On an older style fuel system a general guide line it 20% of the incorrect fuel,no more. If below 20% fill tank right up & keep topping up. If you drive with any petrol in & it is common rail diesel you will end up spending about �6000 so you must be sure...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/main.jhtml?xml=/motoring/2005/08/27/mfdies27.xml
read this if the link works. I suspect from the price they have quoted it is the earlier fuel system but make sure...
Hi there,
I did something very similar to this about 4 weeks ago.
I'd owned my 1996 Renault Laguna 2.2 diesel for around one year - then for some strange reason, picked up the wrong nozzle!? I wonder if it was because I was at a petrol station other than the one I usually use - I really don't know what happened - anyway, I put in 3.5 litres before realising my stupidity.
My tank was about 4/5 empty, so I immediatly changed over and continued filling with diesel, before driving home.
Straight away, I logged onto the internet and did a search - and there were so many conflicting recommendations. Hardly any of these were backed up with any experiences or hard facts.
So, since then, I have done about 2500 miles. I used pretty much the full tank of diesel before topping it up each time. I guess there are two schools of thought on whether you should continually top up, or use most of the fuel before topping up. I chose the second as by the time you put your second tank of clean diesel on top of the contaminated, you have diluted it to virtually nothing.
The first couple of tanks I nursed the car. Didn't go over about 1/4 throttle, didn't go over 65-70mph - just took it quietly, trying not to let things get too hot.
2500 miles on and it's still fine! Hopefully I haven't done any damage, but then the cars only worth �1000 - I thought it was worth the risk.
As an indication, my tank is about 65 litres, so:
Tank 1: 3.5/65= 5.4%, Tank 2: ~1%, Tank 3: <0.1%
Hope this helps anyone in a similar situation!
Danny Blair
1996 Renault RT-D 2.2 (non turbo)