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· One of None
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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
I was told
well, you know, :rolleyes: everyone is an authority on everything!

That a 10 micron primary filter for diesel is just right.

Racor has filters that go to way less. What do most of "yall" use for your under 50 hp engines? (just a random guess on hp)

Now that I'm going to have a new tank I'm wondering if I can get less smudge on transom by going to less microns then 10.

Also, can I keep the new tank sludge free by always using biocides?
 

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The fuel will be clearer as you decrease the microns. But the number of particles less than 10 microns are more than the ones that are greater than 10 microns and smaller particles will pass and burm without any problem. HP is not important, nearly all diese engines use very similiar injectors that have nearly the same tubing for diesel passage.

Trying to keep the water out of the tank is more important than using biocides. The bactera live in the water and eat the diesel which is on top of water. Keeping the tank full when the boat is not in use will keep the water out. The water in a tank is generally due to condensation of water vapor resulting from temperature changes during day time and night. If you keep water out, the bacteria will not find medium to live.
 

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Absolutely. And if you use biocides, rotate brands.

The fuelwill be clearer as you decrease the microns. But the number of particles less than 10 microns are more than the ones that are greater than 10 microns and smaller particles will pass and burm without any problem. HP is not important, nearly all diese engines use very similiar injectors that have nearly the same tubing for diesel passage.

Trying to keep the water out of the tank is more important than using biocides. The bactera live in the water and eat the diesel which is on top of water. Keeping the tank full when the boat is not in use will keep the water out. The water in a tank is generally due to condensation of water vapor resulting from temperature changes during day time and night. If you keep water out, the bacteria will not find medium to live.
and read the ingriedients.
* there is a lot of re-labling, so 2 brands can be the same stuff.
* not fuel additives. Bio-cides are registered as pesticides and that will be on the label.
* you must rotate every few months, because no one product is "broad spectrum." I have done lab work on this, and each brand attacs different bugs, just like different human anti-biotics attack differing strains of bacteria.
 

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You want a 2 micron filter as the secondary or tertiary. Clean fuel without particulates is what you want. The clearances in the injectors will not not put up with particulates for long.

10 microns is almost 0.0005" - and injector tolerances can be 0.0003"

Better safe than sorry - the downside is you may have to change the tertiary filter more often. Cheap insurance.

Best Regards,

e

.::.
 

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If you use a filter less than 10 microns as the first filter, it will clog more earlier. The fist filter will clean particles more than 10 microns and the second and third will clean smaller ones. Clogging will take place a lot later in this way.
 

· One of None
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Discussion Starter · #6 ·
Ok.. I've a racor 220 that uses a 24t element (10m) should I get a 120 and install that after it? EVERYone has 2m filters right? sounds like something worth doing?
ps: never had a probl with 10m filter.
 

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I typically use a 30 micron primary and engine mounted 10 micron secondary with no problem. Last year, I got a free supply of 10 micron 12S? Racor filters...which I used with no problem.

If Yanmar specifiied 10 micron as the OEM filter, then I see no reason to go smaller. The times when I am banging around sloshing up crap in the tank is the exact time I do not want to be changing unnecessarily small filters that got prematurely clogged.

I also think 3 inline filters (three!) is unnecessary.
 

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Ok.. I've a racor 220 that uses a 24t element (10m) should I get a 120 and install that after it? EVERYone has 2m filters right? sounds like something worth doing?
ps: never had a probl with 10m filter.
If you add another Racor, it should likely match the 220 you already have. Cost difference is small, and the filters are interchangable, so you don't have to carry two sizes.
 

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I had a 2um filter but then changed. I attended a Mack Boring Class last year (spring 08) and the instructor stated Yanmar recommends a 15 um for the primary. The reason is the secondary is 2um and anything less the engine will not get enough fuel on demand. I have a 3jbh 35 hp. I realize it is not a 50hp but you may want to check with a dealer or manufacturer to insure correct filter. I change both filters annually and maybe go through 20-30 gallons of fuel a season.
 

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My Westerbeke 4-107 has over 6,000 hours and no rebuild, and for 35 years it has always had three filters, coarse medium, and fine (2 um).

So, with the data available to me, I like 2 um filtration.


"If you have a problem with a diesel, it always the fuel."


Best Regards,

e

.::.
 

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HP is not important, nearly all diese engines use very similiar injectors that have nearly the same tubing for diesel passage.
I understand your point, but HP is very important, as will determine the diesel flow through the filter, so it's area and granular filtering. A trusted dealer should be knowledgeable to indicate what filtering system is more appropriated to your engine (size, rpm, temp, etc ...)
 

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I just put a Racor on my boat for the first filter, IIRC it is a 10 or 20 micron, then the one on the motor is a 2 micron! This is how I understand,, and I operate with my (5)diesels for the ones with 2 inline filters.

marty
 

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Beta engines

A few years back I repowered with a Beta. At the time I was going to be very conservative and began to use 2 micron filters in my prefilter. After going thru 4 filters during a short trip up the Washington coast and ending up at midnight with no engine (clogged filter) and heavy seas, I asked Beta what they recommended. They use a 10 micron filter on their engine and recommend either a 10 or 30 micron prefilter. I now use a 10 AND prefilter the fuel in my tank with a fuel conditioner before any significant trips. The fuel conditioner is one I built using a top fuel dragster fuel pump (plenty of flow rate) and HUGE inline filter.
 

· One of None
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Discussion Starter · #14 ·
Wow... turns out there is a 2m element for my #220 series filter. so now i'm torn on which to get the. R24T is 10m and R24S is 2m. The small spin on for the engine is only 10m. New tank is in and the engine is running again on clean fresh fuel!
 

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NEVER keep the tank full!!!! Especially if you only use a few gallons a year. A full tank means that the fuel is much older and has sat around growing microbes longer. It is fiction that condensation adds water to a diesel tank. If there is water in your tank it came from dirty fuel or a bad O-ring or some simular defect. Physics make it impossible for condensation to add a significant amount of water to a diesel tank. The Myth of Condensation in Fuel Tanks by David Pascoe: Boat Maintenance, Repairs and Troubleshooting
 

· One of None
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Discussion Starter · #16 ·
haven't changed filters yet but my engine is most definitely running smoother! I"m guessing it has better fuel pressure since the pick strainer on the old tank was so badly gunked up.
 

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