Purely effect emissions.
Printable View
Purely effect emissions.
The R730 I was driving would get about 3 tanks of diesel to 1 of adblue. The adblue light would come on when you had enough left for about 100 kms by memory. We used to keep a 10 litre bottle in the trailer toolbox "just in case"
I "nearly" did this myself. We were travelling to S.A., & got to this servo in Nurioopta (I think). Anyway it was a BP, very busy, they were having renos on the driveway, some pumps not working etc, so big delay to get fuel, and several people taking ages to get out of their car, muck around operating the pump etc. Not good.
Anyway, I eventually get to the pump, start to put fuel in, when wifey yells out "STOP" in a loud voice. Luckily, I'd only put in 1.5L of petrol, so no worries, but I was very lucky.
Talking to a friend who owns an ultra tune center, He said they get a few calls a week to drain tanks etc. He said the problem is with the location of the bowsers, where the diesel pump used to have its own location, but not any more.
So now I'm extra careful, to check I've got the right fuel.
Pickles.
Whoah! That doesn't seem right. I get almost all the way between services before needing to top up on AdBlue which equates to around 1l Adblue to 135l fuel. And it's only around $1/litre at the pump. Regular cars & 4WDs are not however, recommended to fill from the bowser (not sure why) so I buy the 10l bottles.
AdBlue converts harmful NOx from your diesel vehicle exhaust into harmless nitrogen and steam, therefore considerably reducing the emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) that are a major source of atmospheric pollution and that lead to smog in urban centres.
The injection rate depends on the specific after-treatment system, but is typically 2–6% of diesel consumption volume
Not too sure how Adblue can be called a fuel. The following has a good description:
AdBlue: What diesel vehicle owners need to know