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USed Oil

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  1. #1
    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    USed Oil

    Years a go I used to pick up waste oil then deliver to a refinery in North Vancouver, way back then I got a $1.00 a gallon sometimes less depending on moisture content.

    On every load coming into the refinery they took a sample to run in the lab to check how much moisture content the oil had. This was all done during off loading the oil, with a check printed and signed alway waiting for me as I left the refinery.

    Now I have my own waste oil fired hot water boiler, the hunt for used oil is on again, anyhow my point is there maybe some market for used oil. Plenty of shops and car washes using these waste oil heaters driving up demand for used oil.

    What is even better you do not need a pump, just use the vacuum from your intake manifold to draw the liquids into the tank your using to haul; your oil. Only works from a gasoline engine, diesels to not make vacuum.



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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kris Kringle View Post
    How does that one work have you got a check Valve So no Used oil will be Sucked into your valves and Flood your engine with Dirty oil?
    This is not my idea, I learned this from working in the oil patch. The water truck had a mason jar attached just under the dashboard but in a very accessible and visual setting. The jar screwed into an aluminum top fitted with a ball valve to shut the vacuum off when the jar started filling.

    If we have the vacuum line going to the intake manifold the other going to the top of the water or oil tank through the mason jar, your suction hose at the bottom, when the tank and only when the tank is full with water or oil enter the mason. Tough luck got ya if you fall asleep or your daydreaming about watching the peelers after work.

    You do not need a particularity heavy tank for this to work because you have an open end the suction hose. If you closed this and forgot to shut down the vacuum your tank would implode. But your covered because the engine would also be full of water or oil if you forgot your vacuum.

    If the used oil is contaminated with lots of gasoline, and I mean lots of gasoline in capital letters, the engine is going to idle rough from the rich fumes entering the intake.
    At least thats what an old friend told me. Me I just hauled used oil.

    Another thing to take into account is how much above sea level your at, the higher up you are the less engine vacuum you have and it will take longer to do the same job had you been at sea level. Isn't science a blast.

    Sucking up used oil from an underground tank the two worst things that can happen, your hose will suck itself tight to an inner wall of the tank or you suck up a mechanics discarded rag into your pump. Yes I used a vane pump attached to a PTO run off the transmission.

    If by chance you do miss the switch and the engine gets flooded, your not going to turn it over on the starter, not enough power to compress the liquids sitting on top of those pistons. You'll have to pull the spark plugs to clear the engine, no harm done just a bloody nuisance so I'm told by my friend.
    Last edited by gustavus; 11-26-2011 at 08:37 PM.

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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    For fun next time you have a metal fuel drum, weld or braze a pipe nipple into one of the bungs, then replace the bung attach a hose from your intake manifold then watch what happens to the drum.

    As the drum is being evacuated from the engines intake, just use the vacuum hose of the power brake booster. The drum slowly collapses into itself. It generally gives way in the center first then the ends will pull towards the center.

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    I have sold used oil before. Mostly oil out of large transformers diatect oil i believe or something like that. Mostly though its been hydraulic fluid or 90 weight well I don't know if its 90 weight but that's what I always heard it called. The stuff is thick like honey. I know I got over a buck usually per gallon. They always deducted for water once they figured out what the percentage of water to oil was when it was contaminated or tainted oil.

    Never had a problem with a 55 gallon drum collapsing they always would open up both ports on the top of barrel before sticking the tube from the vac truck in it. It would suck up like 30 gallons a minute of regular oil or something crazy like that. I remember when we put it in barrels and lined them up in a row it didn't take long to suck them all dry.

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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kris Kringle View Post
    Duhhhhhhhhhhhh Sorry Gus got you Now in simple terms

    Hook Line up to intake of engine Run it to a tank say 55 Gallon tank that is air tight Put the Vacuum Line at the top of the Tank.

    Then take a Static Line connect it to say like the bottom of the tank and Start the Engine let the Vaccum work to Draw out the Oil from the other tank and Monitor it GOTCHA GUS lolololol
    Yes that is the principal behind it. Engine makes more vacuum at an idle so higher RPM's will not help. If you have watch a vacuum gauge hooked up it draws heavy vacuum at an idle or when the pin the throttle for only for a short time. If your going up a long hill yes you will be making good vacuum.

    We old farts use a vacuum gauge to monitor our driving habits, if the gauge is showing lots of vacuum or inches of mercury being pulled your not getting good fuel economy.

    The gauge can tell you plenty about the health of your engine.

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    Only works from a gasoline engine, diesels to not make vacuum.
    That's why diesels have vacuum booster pumps running off the engine, or at least my 83 Chevy dually did.
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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kris Kringle View Post
    I agree Gus Vacuum Gage can tell lots going on with the engine. Remember the old Vacuum operated Window wipers? lol


    Off of Engines now back to tires I am sure you know the Old Trick of using either to Seal a Bead on a Tire also lololol
    Yea I have a story on either, but it's not going into print.

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    The gauge can tell you plenty about the health of your engine.
    My stepdad used to use a vacuum gauge to set the timing and adjust the carb on his Chevy truck. When he got done you would just hardly turn the key and it would be running.

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    Vacuum gauges also used when synching multiple carbs on bikes.
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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by PistoneScrapProcessing View Post
    I have sold used oil before. Mostly oil out of large transformers diatect oil i believe or something like that. Mostly though its been hydraulic fluid or 90 weight well I don't know if its 90 weight but that's what I always heard it called. The stuff is thick like honey. I know I got over a buck usually per gallon. They always deducted for water once they figured out what the percentage of water to oil was when it was contaminated or tainted oil.

    Never had a problem with a 55 gallon drum collapsing they always would open up both ports on the top of barrel before sticking the tube from the vac truck in it. It would suck up like 30 gallons a minute of regular oil or something crazy like that. I remember when we put it in barrels and lined them up in a row it didn't take long to suck them all dry.
    Easy money, whenever an old apartment building, hotel or large industrial building was slated to come under the wrecking ball, most of these old building had boilers fired from bunker oil. The tanks sometimes had 5,000 gallons left inside to recover.

    Some of the old buildings had a retrofit of the same boiler using bunker fuel over to natural gas, the tanks left untouched still half full or more. The tanks held when full 10,000 gallons

    Buck a gallon that was over 10 years back these days probably get double that.

    I heat my laboratory and a small reactor with a waste oil hot water boiler, next year I'm going to pour a new slab in the shop with hot water heat in the floor then plumb the house into that boiler. So far I've been lucky and get all the waste oil I need for free.

    I get a lot of waste vegetable oil, next on my to do list is bio diesel, I've been dragging my feet on this project waiting for a patent to be released. A student discovered a catalyst that simplifies the process of making bio and utilizes almost 100% of the feedstock.

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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    I still collect used oil, mostly from restaurants to use in my waste oil fired hot water boiler. the boiler resides in a small workshop attached the the rear of my garage.

    Pure comfort pulling up a chair in front of that old cast iron radiator with a sore aching back listening to some old Pink Floyd CD's while pulling them rheostats and relays apart. I'm using an old propane tank for my expansion tank on the boiler. Well it's not really an expansion tank just catches the over flow when the anti freeze expands by 30% when heated.


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    Had to chime in on the Pink Floyd! Some great head music!
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    Gus, I love reading your stuff even though I don't comprehend a quarter of it. BTW, is that moonshine in the jug you have there....you gonna tell us how you make that too !! lol

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    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dumpster-Dee View Post
    Gus, I love reading your stuff even though I don't comprehend a quarter of it. BTW, is that moonshine in the jug you have there....you gonna tell us how you make that too !! lol
    The bottle has nitric acid in it, A friend of mine had a still called a reflux column it produced 96% pure alcohol first run.

    A reflux works so well because alcohol evaporates at 176f while water turns to steam at 210, the marbles in the column are pre heated by the alcohol coming off first. But the marbles in the column have to reach 176f before anything will pass into the condenser.

    Any water coming into the column finds the marbles cold even at 176 and re-condenses back, hence the name reflux.

    You can always pick out the shiners in the super market, they're the older guys hanging around the sugar isle with the large push carts. My opening line into a conversation is to ask what strain of yeast are they using.

    Champagne yeast was my favorite, it has a much higher tolerance for alcohol and will produce much more than other yeasts which die off as the alcohol content rises in the mash.
    Last edited by gustavus; 12-06-2011 at 08:32 PM.

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