Those auto-gearboxes are always slow to change gear. They need to be triggered by getting off the accelerator after kickdown. Manuals are much better anyway...
Yeah the engine was down a cylinder. The gear box could have been ok, if the engine can't deliver the power it won't shift unless you let off the throttle.
yep, the engine smoked really bad and had no power. So I understand that why they did these tests with it. But in no way was that first test valid. If that engine would have been in good condition it would have performed lot better.
I have tractors from the 1960s on the farm my family bought new back then. These tractors all have been started multiple times a week every Canadian border winter in the well below zero Fahrenheit early morning hours. We (grandfather, father, and myself) have been doing this, the tractors whole lives. We obviously don’t run them on it, just starting use. But doing this likely 150 times a year, for over 50 years, hasn’t stopped them from running, or seem to have damaged them. Most have never had the engine even opened up, besides removing the valve covers or something small like that. Each start easily in the summer months still, and are used regularly still also. A new tractor? Yes we got many, and no we don’t use starting fluid on these, they have warranties still. And trust me, they need it, as they break down way to much. Garbage electronics and computers mounted all over them, and hold up like the cow shit they are supposed to help clean up in a farm environment. I will take my old Massey Ferguson 135 or 165s reliability any day over the new stuff. The only advantage the new stuff has is modern attachments for special uses, but the old ones can still do everything important.
I saw a guy from Bosnia, that has an natural/raw OIL spring ,shooting oil from the ground.... guy just scoopes it from the ground and pits it in the tractor.... it works just fine.... Edit; I think VICE showed it in one of their documentaries about 10 years ago...
Erm, you don't seem to be letting us know what you run those tractors on. Personally, I recommend boiled up seal flipper to get things started on those cold Canadian mornings.
i know what you mean im a truck driver and i restored a 1985 peterbilt to pull my loads with. its more reliable than my 2023 freightliner cascadia. plus starting fluid doesn't kill a diesel engine they just help start them up in the cold.
This channel makes videos of silly things I always thought of when I was child. Seriously, it takes me back to a nostalgia almost. Keep up the great work!
From Wikipedia: "Caution is required when using starting fluid with diesel engines that have preheat systems in the intake or glow-plugs installed, as the starting fluid may pre-ignite, leading to engine damage." Not an issue in this video since the engine was already warm, but could get quite spectacular during a cold start.
"on sunflower seed oil, it runs but uts not happy, about the same on brake fluid. so the winner so far would be motor oil." Best thing I've heard on TH-cam in a while.... given the context
They run even better on sunflower oil, you just need to preheat the oil and use bigger feedlines, also it is best to add a bit of pre ignition to get better power
@@antoniosestar3671 the oil needs longer to ignite so you have to advance your injection timing to compensate that i advanced mine about 6° and had no smoke and full power
I run a mix of ATF/engine oil/any kind of petro lube mix in my 7.3 powerstroke or T444E turbo diesels, I usually cut it about 20% off road diesel to thin it out a bit but it does fine, been doing it for about 10 years, no regrets, just clean it good and get the water out. In the winter I would put a little snoot of gas to keep it a little thinner but not alot. I seem engines after people have ran gas through a diesel but I've never done it or see it done till now, thanks fellas, you guys are so fun to watch. I like that G wagon, make something cool out of it.
My dad always used a 70/30 diesel/gas mixture if he needed to clean out the exhaust of our '87 Nissan Laurel 2.8D for the annual emissions check. You wouldn't want to drive behind the car during that 'cleaning' but it always drove well on it and also smokeless once the existing carbon deposits were burned away.
@@markchapman2585 that's a grenade waiting to happen 😅😅😅 if the engine did not fireball, then it would definitely blow all of it's engine and exhaust gaskets, kill sensors and make the ECUs flip out all at the same time 😅😵😵
I want to see it run on a mix of everything - equal parts diesel, gas, motor oil, brake fluid, ether, nitromethane, cooking oil, WD-40, hair spray, bacon grease, ATF, & paint thinner
Definitely don't spray paint your inner fender well while its running if you have a cold air intake on your diesel. Yep it sat there and idled at about 1500 for 10 seconds.
Either fuel pump or the injectors. The injector mechanism is designed to use fuel that lubricates the part and if the injector starts to wear as a result of missing lubrication, the high pressure will damage the metal parts pretty fast. And diesel engines run poorly even with normal wear in the injectors when injectors are old enough.
The the injection-pump on this model is lubricated by the engine-oil, not by the fuel. it´s an old pre-chamber turbo-diesel (not a cdi) with a mechanic in-line injection-pump, the best you ever could get.
@@lenmar6382 Wow! I didn't expect the engine to be so old that it has pre-chambers. That explains a lot about why the engine kept running that long. I guess "the best" as in "runs forever" instead of "highest performance" or "best economy".
I used to mix sun flower oil (instead of 2 stroke oil) in my 50cc puch maxi with shaved cylinder head, having it reduced by approx 1 mm and higher compression, it did well over 10.000 rpm, it didn't get off the line without help of my feet, but once going it was almost like a F1 moped, it sounded amazing and smell like a restaurant. pretty much stock, but almost 80 km/h. Just using a book from the library on 2 strokes and modifying the cy, head and piston with files, grinding paste using glass plate, widening the intlet/exhaust port, manifold. It behaved like a diesel, you could pull the lead from the spark plug and kept on running, the spark plug was red hot.
I did that with a Vespa 150S once, when they were worth $50. Mine lasted about ten minutes before shredding the clutch corks. I replaced the buttons with wine bottle cork slithers and upped the spring tension with inner valve springs. I then added some nitrous using a pocket 'butox' welding kit with a custom made injector plate under the Dellorto carb and used the propane component of the welder to richen the mixture, tuning it with huge revs with a closed throttle and dribbling oil in to keep it from seizing, I triggered the nitrous with a hydraulic solenoid valve. It went like stink until I hit third gear on the maiden nitrous run then it split the entire engine casing in half between the gearbox and crankcase then threw the conrod out the other side. It punched three holes including the big one that separated the gearbox. What a blast.
The funny or ironic thing is, there's a video on how a truck runs on Vodka and iirc it was actually very good! There was a killer comment "It ran better on Vodka because it forgot about all its problems" 😂
Every 3000km add 1 liter of ATF to the fuel tank...it will clean and lubricate the diesel pump and injectors . Did that to my 1992 VW 1600 TD never a pump or injector issue for @ 900,000km. The engine ran perfectly when I junked the car due to complete frame rot and the drivers seat falling through the floor.
The heat from gasoline damaged the engine. But if you try a mix of 10% gasoline with 90% diesel, you will get power boost at the expense of a bit of more heat. You'll be mixing cetane with octane, and if the gas pipes are not adequately prepared the seals might decompose (the fuel system is prepared for diesel and not gasoline).
@@joe125ful LPG is fine as long as you don't use it with diesel injectors. Diesel pump and injectors are designed to be used with fuel that lubricates the parts. Using non-lubricating fuel is pretty similar to replacing the engine oil with gasoline.
@pedrorocha6203 Gasoline does not have more “power” or “heat” than diesel. Diesel actually has more power. The overheating would be from something else, like more friction or incorrect burn of the fuel.
Overheating wasn't caused by the types of fuel, but rather, a stuck thermostat. Even if the coolant levels are up, if the thermostat doesn't allow coolant to circulate when hot, the engine heats up rapidly. That would also explain the fans not coming on when hot. The hot water isn't circulating through the radiator. The fan sensor is in the bottom tank of the radiator, and if no hot water makes it down there, the fans won't come on. This engine would have survived just fine, if water had been flowing through the radiator once it warmed up. The only concern with alternate fuels, is lubrication of the high pressure fuel pump. Surprisingly, the pump isn't what went wrong!
I did that once and before I caught it 4 gallons of gas mixed with 5 gallons of diesel seems not a problem ran fine and not a subsequent failure when I got back on diesel. I' did keep diluting it every 40 miles
You got a little lucky, but there was enough diesel that it would still compression ignite reliably, and had enough lubricity that the injection pump survived. Definitely not something I'd recommend doing, but I'm glad your engine survived. What was it? Volkswagen?
The gasoline causes the diesel engine to run hotter than normal because it lacks the lubricants that diesel and oil have. Part of the cooling factor of a diesel engine is the diesel itself. That combined with the cylinders being washed down with gasoline makes for very bad things.
I wonder if you could run it on 100LL. It's 100 octane gasoline with TEL. It's used on general aviation aircraft and the lead is specifically there to prevent petrol knock, but will also provide lubrication which petrol does not.
No. The main problem is that 100 octane gasoline, with or without lead, is designed specifically to be highly resistant to compression ignition. "Petrol knock" is compression ignition, and is the only ignition a diesel engine uses. As such, it won't ignite reliably, and when it does, it will almost always be at the wrong time, hence it behaves very badly and damages the engine very quickly if you try to push through like they did.
A company where I live switched over to used cooking oil from commercial deep friers. You knew when you were following one of their trucks because it smelled like popcorn.
Brake fluid is Hydroscopic (absorbs water), so it can absorb H20 in the tanks (same with Ethanol). It won't make your engine run better but may allow it to pass H2O in the system and prevent the engine from stalling due to water in the system.
Well, it landed up in Russia as a scrapped vehicle, so yes likely it was well done already. Now the garage has a project on rebuilding something not made by Lada or Trabant.
I managed to put gasoline into a diesel tank. Only 10 liters. I realised what I have done, top it up with high quality diesel and I prayed. Next day was the pay check- long and rough start. 2 times did it. And when the tank was topped up couple of times with diesel the issue disappeared. Went to the mechanic who did a full computerised diagnosis and nothing wrong came out. I was lucky that I realised the mistake at an early stage. Volvo engine...D5. I have 185000 km and no issues. Be careful, fill up the tank with the correct fuel.
The Injectors on a Diesel Engine use the Diesel Fuel as Lubricant as well, putting Gasoline in the system, flushes the lubrication film, and destroys the Injectors. After the Injectors died, the Engine it self died. A Gasoline Car that's been started on Diesel will usually run fairly fine after flushing out the Diesel. Not so much vise versa
Non-oily fuels used in a diesel engine end up washing the cylinder walls of lubrication, so they heat up faster, and then end up causing pistons to expand, trashing the cylinder walls and then seizing up into a boulder, that engine's toast... :P
@@brysonshires9742 Diesel does lubricate the various pumps involved, but in the pistons and cylinders, things are a little different, as a diesel has thicker rings to maintain higher compression ratios thus more surface area that needs lubing, and this relies on the lubricity of the diesel fuel to aid in keeping them from scraping the cylinders, take away that oily fuel and the rings aren't being lubricated as fuels such as petrol or the starter fluid at the end wash the remnants of diesel off the walls, basically leaving the top of the pistons "dry", and of course this increases friction, friction generates heat, and so-on, petrol engines aren't as tight-fitting so can get away with thinner rings so less friction issues, and for petrol engines, there are lubricants in the fuel (again, these aid with the pumps) which help keep things sliding smoothly in the cylinders as well... :)
I had a 1980 VW rabbit diesel, and the manual stated that in the winter, I was to add one gallon of unleaded gas during each diesel fill up! It worked well until I lost the car in the divorce!
@@Oo-IIII-oO it was actually a nice car, although woefully underpowered. Driving from Westchester county New York on the New York thruway to BUFFALO , with the AC on, I frequently had to downshift from fifth gear to as low as third gear. The divorce cost me plenty though.
I run one of my diesels on used motor oil quite often and it runs fine, but after a while junk accumulates and it'll smoke 'till it gets cleaned out with diesel fuel. The oil works best on highway driving where the temperature and RPM are high.
This engine at the end of the video looks exactly like the GAZ-53A engine - V8, 4.2 liter gasoline with 120 hp. and a 4-speed manual gearbox. It will be even better if it is from the ZIL 130 - 6.0 liters with 150 horses and a 5-speed manual gearbox. Either way, it will be a lot of fun to put this type of Soviet engine in a Mercedes-Benz G Class!
Gasoline burns much faster than Diesel fuel, the problem was injection timing, with a gas engine you need timing to be at least 10-2 degrees before top dead center of piston travel, and a Diesel engine injects almost at top dead center, so the gasoline had already burned up by the time 20 degrees after top dead center was reached, and the air was not regulated by a throttle, so it could burn very hot.
Ether (starting fluid) burns very fast, that’s why it’s helpful for recalcitrant engines. Small amounts do no harm….but if you need it you have other issues to look into.
Yes it ran on all oily fuels but Gasoline is a dry fuel and overheated due to lack of lubrication in fuel. That's why Gas cars blow smoke with added oil fuels but recover when oil is diluted from fuel. No lubrication in a new diesel just destroys high pressure pumps and compression and is not recoverable.
Gr8 video, that quick start liquid can be removed from the can using a piercing pliers- can tap pliers, it hugs the aerosol can, when locking the pliers around the aerosol can, the piercing device punches a partial hole in the metal, and the rubber seals against the outside of the aerosol can, this can tap pliers has a sae 1/4" port to attach to an airconditioning charging manifold, that way you can have a controlled release of the aerosol's contents ...and that quick start fluid, when injected into a car's airconditioning system, mixing with the refrigerant gas, the a/c starts working ice cold after some time using it, possibly cleaning out the condensor from the inside
Wow, someone invented a scarier combination than conventional refrigerant and propane (fake refrigerant)-conventional refrigerant and starting fluid! That's a terrifying combination. Starting fluid is the most easily ignited chemical sold commonly to consumers, and you're mixing it with conventional refrigerant, which produces some of the most deadly combustion byproducts produced by anything accessible to consumers. Hence, you're exponentially increasing the odds of a refrigerant fire in an accident, making those deadly gases that much more likely to form right next to you and whoever else was involved in the accident. Also, if a future owner who isn't a DIYer takes this mixture to a shop, I shudder to think what it would do to their equipment, and there is no way they could reuse that chemical soup, which would be very expensive for them to have destroyed. If you didn't get the hint, this is extremely dangerous, probably violates Federal law (and is definitely illegal in certain states which prohibit the use of flammable refrigerants in motor vehicles) and is just generally a very bad idea. Please stop!
@@edifyguy i take it ur from a first world country ...come over here to the 3rd and 4th world countries and see how things are done. PS , immigrants from here in your heaven of a country are already doing these type of stuff....🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
@@ArvineHarry I'm aware that in other countries there is a certain amount of ......creativity that takes place just to get by. I honestly am all for that, and do some myself, but there are limits to it. That combination is just particularly scary. If you really want a cheap and effective refrigerant, use 60% propane and 40% isobutane to completely replace your conventional refrigerant. It's much less flammable than starting fluid, and doesn't produce anything toxic if it does catch fire. It's also super cheap, and many say it works better than R-134, on par with R-12. It used to be sold in this country as R-12a, but got banned from being sold under that name. Allegedly it was about safety. However, it's still a lot safer than R-anything plus starting fluid!
Thats not ethanol my friend, that right there, is the Cosby sauce. Ether my friend, scent of the fairies, one good whiff of that stuff, and your mind will be asking your body how much it had to drink. Stone sober with little to no control over your body, like a bad trip on Qualudes.
I hope you guys replace the intake valves with check valves. 19th century engines would do that, with how high compression can be today, it might not be so bad.
This happen on my f250 when my works put 87 in the tank and it takes diesel. The truck was hauling 14k pounds and it drove on gas for about 40 minutes before it started to miss fire and heard a Hugh pop and the truck die and didn't want to start up. Had to take it to the mechanic and do a flush. Thank God the engine didn't get messed up
Running gasoline in a diesel engine is a bit hard on it, even for engines designed to run on both fuels. Those engines recommended that you always treat the gasoline with motor oil when using it. The good news is it doesn't have to be fresh motor oil, it can be filtered, but used motor oil. Mechanically injected diesels are also better for this type of experiment. Another fuel you should try is to use butane and or Propane vapor in the engine after warm up. Obviously, you want to use vapor so if you use butane, this will be a summer experiment. You will not have to mix in motor oil if vapor is used as it will not wash the cylinder walls. In winter, compressed natural gas would be a better option as it is still a gas even at colder temps.
I have an old CJ-7 that I switch between diesel and petrol, regularly. I just have to adjust the timing when I switch fuels, which is as easy as a turn of the wrist on a CJ-7.
I know what’s wrong with it, it’s got gas in it Diesel adds a whole lot of lubrication to the system, gas is as good at cleansing oil from cylinder walls as diesel is at lubing them; the extra friction is what caused excess heat. The ether in the starting fluid wears on the, typically, vanadium alloys that are used in cylinder linings
used to add up to 10% petrol to vegetable oil to stop it freezing in the winter time and it ran fine in an old citroen xud diesel engine with a bosch fuel pump and a 12 volt dc heat exchanger. the problem with petrol in a diesel engine is there is not enough lubrication for the pump diesel oil is very oil rich and energy dense. Modern High pressure diesel injection systems wont tolerate petrol because of the fuel pressure being to low. it is hard to run one on even engine oil or vegetable oil, older engines pre 1998 do a lot better. Before HDi engines.
Used engine oil somehow works in diesel engines, I use it from time to time with my diesel car. Just filter it and pour into the tank, engine runs very smooth. I usually mix it with 2-stroke oil and diesel and never had any issues
The gasoline fuel needs a specific amout of air to fuel ratio in order to either burn cool and make sufficent power. Diesel engines control the amount of fuel injected, and they usually have a completely unrestricted intake with loads of air. This means you can only control the AF ratio with the throttle pedal. You would either be running it too lean and overheating the engine, or running it too rich and bogging down. Usually the fuel map in a gasoline car controls the fuel injected, but in this case it was the throttle and only the throttle, while the amount of air was controlled by the rpm only.
get an old tech diesel and put a large motorbike carb/injector on the intake and run as normal, the diesel igniting is the spark plug, two torque curves. im putting LPG and turbo on my old diesel to clean the smog up a bit, its an Australian truck thing....
I have ran waste cooking oil in the past in idi engine, poured straight from the drum with only a sandbag over the drum as a filter, 10 litres of diesel & 50 litres of wvo.. No starting issues, ran perfect for years.. Would like to see how far a common rail can be pushed,engines like or similar Bmw M47, volvo d5244t, toyota 1cd-ftv or 1nd-tv e.t.c
Do not add brake fluid to diesel. It can damage rubber seals, pump seals, fuel sensors, exhaust sensors, and these things can cause ECU problems, not to mention leaks and very expensive repairs. 2 cycle oil can help marginally to lubricate injectors and pumps, but brake fluid has NO place inside an engine.
Yes diesels run very well on motor oil. The cheap way to do it is to use used motor oil. You run a garage so you would have plenty. You just need to filter it. I used to do this with my 60 series Land cruiser.
We run vehicles on waste motor oil all the time. You just have to filter it well. Also, transmission fluid is much much better than diesel (so is wmo) The real intersting stuff happens when you cut it. 10% of x, 20% of y ect.
old motor oil filtered and mixed with little gasoline is called Black Diesel.... afaik, most diesel cars,trucks etc will run on it just fine....sometimes you need better fuel filter....
My wife put diesel in our Tundra (about 20L) and it was a bit sluggish and chuggy...needless to say I threw a full tank in and diluted it out, been fine ever since😎
you would still need lubrication. try a 20% gasoline mix. or you could go with a 10-15% ethanol mix. ethanol mix will make the diesel look like cartoon radioactive waste.
To run a diesel on kerosene or petrol you add 1/200 of 2 stroke oil, I did run a Mazda 626 Diesel for 2 years on kerosene using that mix. If you do not add oil it will ruin the diesel fuel pump and that is very expensive to fix as the fuel pump on a diesel is very special and run extremely high pressures injecting fuel at precisely times moments. y .
i think that mercedes engine and gearbox was dead before the video even started
Om606 never dies
I'm 99% sure about that
Those auto-gearboxes are always slow to change gear. They need to be triggered by getting off the accelerator after kickdown.
Manuals are much better anyway...
Yeah the engine was down a cylinder.
The gear box could have been ok, if the engine can't deliver the power it won't shift unless you let off the throttle.
yep, the engine smoked really bad and had no power. So I understand that why they did these tests with it. But in no way was that first test valid. If that engine would have been in good condition it would have performed lot better.
When I was mechanic in the early 2010s I used to mix all of the petrol from people who had put into wrong vfuel in there vehicles into my VW Vento
I remember that mate I did the same with my ford sierra 😂
Good thing you’re not one anymore. 😂
Poor OM606 engine 😢
my 7.3 idi would burn anything that was flammable. wasnt the biggest fan of raw gas. had to cut it with some oil and diesel mix.
@localeightironworker hmmmm seems interesting
I have tractors from the 1960s on the farm my family bought new back then. These tractors all have been started multiple times a week every Canadian border winter in the well below zero Fahrenheit early morning hours. We (grandfather, father, and myself) have been doing this, the tractors whole lives. We obviously don’t run them on it, just starting use. But doing this likely 150 times a year, for over 50 years, hasn’t stopped them from running, or seem to have damaged them. Most have never had the engine even opened up, besides removing the valve covers or something small like that. Each start easily in the summer months still, and are used regularly still also. A new tractor? Yes we got many, and no we don’t use starting fluid on these, they have warranties still. And trust me, they need it, as they break down way to much. Garbage electronics and computers mounted all over them, and hold up like the cow shit they are supposed to help clean up in a farm environment. I will take my old Massey Ferguson 135 or 165s reliability any day over the new stuff. The only advantage the new stuff has is modern attachments for special uses, but the old ones can still do everything important.
Ahaa.
I saw a guy from Bosnia, that has an natural/raw OIL spring ,shooting oil from the ground....
guy just scoopes it from the ground and pits it in the tractor....
it works just fine....
Edit; I think VICE showed it in one of their documentaries about 10 years ago...
Erm, you don't seem to be letting us know what you run those tractors on. Personally, I recommend boiled up seal flipper to get things started on those cold Canadian mornings.
thats why new sh$t is Bad
i know what you mean im a truck driver and i restored a 1985 peterbilt to pull my loads with. its more reliable than my 2023 freightliner cascadia. plus starting fluid doesn't kill a diesel engine they just help start them up in the cold.
Russian man: Ahh haa
Translator: Okay it started
The translator is so good, he can read minds :)
Yeah love it:):)
HAHA
LOL
We also have a vast range of translations for "blin" on this channel ;)
This channel makes videos of silly things I always thought of when I was child. Seriously, it takes me back to a nostalgia almost. Keep up the great work!
Run an engine on vegetable oil instead of engine oil, but route it through an external "oil cooler" (deep fryer) that you cook in 😂
Avocado oil with additives works
@@zqzjsounds green enough
I can totally see that. Deep-fry potatoes in the back seat when u need extra fuel ⛽️ 😅
Good idea!!!
I think they did that 5 years ago but without the deep fryer so that is an exciting new compromise
From Wikipedia: "Caution is required when using starting fluid with diesel engines that have preheat systems in the intake or glow-plugs installed, as the starting fluid may pre-ignite, leading to engine damage." Not an issue in this video since the engine was already warm, but could get quite spectacular during a cold start.
Washes the oil off the compression rings
I imagine that the last test was akin to feeding amphetamines to a rabbit... Ten seconds of berserker rage and then nothing but flatline.
Eh I bet the crackheads of the pest world could take it long enough to at least pop out a few dozen kids.
"on sunflower seed oil, it runs but uts not happy, about the same on brake fluid. so the winner so far would be motor oil."
Best thing I've heard on TH-cam in a while.... given the context
Kerosene, and whale oil works too. Pretty much anything oily and potentially flammable is good in a diesel.
They run even better on sunflower oil, you just need to preheat the oil and use bigger feedlines, also it is best to add a bit of pre ignition to get better power
@@christianh.8408 what do you mean by "a bit of pre ignition"?
@@antoniosestar3671 the oil needs longer to ignite so you have to advance your injection timing to compensate that i advanced mine about 6° and had no smoke and full power
BAHAHa
I run a mix of ATF/engine oil/any kind of petro lube mix in my 7.3 powerstroke or T444E turbo diesels, I usually cut it about 20% off road diesel to thin it out a bit but it does fine, been doing it for about 10 years, no regrets, just clean it good and get the water out. In the winter I would put a little snoot of gas to keep it a little thinner but not alot. I seem engines after people have ran gas through a diesel but I've never done it or see it done till now, thanks fellas, you guys are so fun to watch. I like that G wagon, make something cool out of it.
My dad always used a 70/30 diesel/gas mixture if he needed to clean out the exhaust of our '87 Nissan Laurel 2.8D for the annual emissions check. You wouldn't want to drive behind the car during that 'cleaning' but it always drove well on it and also smokeless once the existing carbon deposits were burned away.
Basically a manual reburn system lmao
😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
Nothing wrong doing that once and a while to clean the carbon. Can you imagine doing that on a new diesel engine with all the emissions stuff on them.
@@markchapman2585 that's a grenade waiting to happen 😅😅😅 if the engine did not fireball, then it would definitely blow all of it's engine and exhaust gaskets, kill sensors and make the ECUs flip out all at the same time 😅😵😵
@@wildfirephoenix2262 I like to se it
The "I can't see anything behind the hood" and the giant smoke wall next to destroyed me 🤣Keep it up
17:36, in Australia, that stuff is sold as "Start Ya Bastard".
God bless Australia.
@@EnwardJim Maybe if the US was a penal colony, we would have become half as awesome.
@@phantom240
It's not one already?
I want to see it run on a mix of everything - equal parts diesel, gas, motor oil, brake fluid, ether, nitromethane, cooking oil, WD-40, hair spray, bacon grease, ATF, & paint thinner
JOEY!!!!!!! Lets make some wakeup juice 🗣🗣🗣
@@leon419is that a back to the future reference I see before me.
@@Pwills 😁😁😁😁😁😁
Definitely don't spray paint your inner fender well while its running if you have a cold air intake on your diesel.
Yep it sat there and idled at about 1500 for 10 seconds.
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
The first thing to be destroyed with a non-lubricating fuel is the fuel pump.
No engine jam sooner i think.
joe125fuln no it will be the pump
Either fuel pump or the injectors. The injector mechanism is designed to use fuel that lubricates the part and if the injector starts to wear as a result of missing lubrication, the high pressure will damage the metal parts pretty fast. And diesel engines run poorly even with normal wear in the injectors when injectors are old enough.
The the injection-pump on this model is lubricated by the engine-oil, not by the fuel.
it´s an old pre-chamber turbo-diesel (not a cdi) with a mechanic in-line injection-pump, the best you ever could get.
@@lenmar6382 Wow! I didn't expect the engine to be so old that it has pre-chambers. That explains a lot about why the engine kept running that long.
I guess "the best" as in "runs forever" instead of "highest performance" or "best economy".
that mercedes was already going to die before they even put the gasoline in
A om606 never dies
@@Dorifto555it dos
Trash tho
@@Dorifto555 it died. Dead as a door nail.
It did sound a little rough, but it definitely would have lived a lot longer had it not been fed gasoline......
06:30 the nokia cover 😂😂😂❤
I like the detail on how at 8:23 the passenger seat of the test car is already in siesta mode.
I used to mix sun flower oil (instead of 2 stroke oil) in my 50cc puch maxi with shaved cylinder head, having it reduced by approx 1 mm and higher compression, it did well over 10.000 rpm, it didn't get off the line without help of my feet, but once going it was almost like a F1 moped, it sounded amazing and smell like a restaurant. pretty much stock, but almost 80 km/h.
Just using a book from the library on 2 strokes and modifying the cy, head and piston with files, grinding paste using glass plate, widening the intlet/exhaust port, manifold.
It behaved like a diesel, you could pull the lead from the spark plug and kept on running, the spark plug was red hot.
I did that with a Vespa 150S once, when they were worth $50. Mine lasted about ten minutes before shredding the clutch corks. I replaced the buttons with wine bottle cork slithers and upped the spring tension with inner valve springs. I then added some nitrous using a pocket 'butox' welding kit with a custom made injector plate under the Dellorto carb and used the propane component of the welder to richen the mixture, tuning it with huge revs with a closed throttle and dribbling oil in to keep it from seizing, I triggered the nitrous with a hydraulic solenoid valve. It went like stink until I hit third gear on the maiden nitrous run then it split the entire engine casing in half between the gearbox and crankcase then threw the conrod out the other side. It punched three holes including the big one that separated the gearbox. What a blast.
That would be HCCI rather than a diesel
The poor thing died from alcohol poisoning.🤣
Like most of Russians:)
😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
lol
The funny or ironic thing is, there's a video on how a truck runs on Vodka and iirc it was actually very good! There was a killer comment "It ran better on Vodka because it forgot about all its problems" 😂
That om 606 😢😢😢😢.
It's like the Optimus of engines
Nah..
@@joe125ful Yah
True good sir Its a beautiful engine
True good sir,it's a beautiful engine.
😂😂😂
Every 3000km add 1 liter of ATF to the fuel tank...it will clean and lubricate the diesel pump and injectors . Did that to my 1992 VW 1600 TD never a pump or injector issue for @ 900,000km. The engine ran perfectly when I junked the car due to complete frame rot and the drivers seat falling through the floor.
i rekon modern diesels wont like that as much :D
That was the video with the best translation, even original audio was good and clear, great improvement
The heat from gasoline damaged the engine. But if you try a mix of 10% gasoline with 90% diesel, you will get power boost at the expense of a bit of more heat. You'll be mixing cetane with octane, and if the gas pipes are not adequately prepared the seals might decompose (the fuel system is prepared for diesel and not gasoline).
And cyl rings get stuck soon without lublication too.
@@joe125ful a lot of cars run on LPG which doesn't have any lubrication
@@antoniosestar3671 LPG dont have that much heat as gasoline have.
@@joe125ful LPG is fine as long as you don't use it with diesel injectors. Diesel pump and injectors are designed to be used with fuel that lubricates the parts. Using non-lubricating fuel is pretty similar to replacing the engine oil with gasoline.
@pedrorocha6203
Gasoline does not have more “power” or “heat” than diesel. Diesel actually has more power.
The overheating would be from something else, like more friction or incorrect burn of the fuel.
Overheating wasn't caused by the types of fuel, but rather, a stuck thermostat. Even if the coolant levels are up, if the thermostat doesn't allow coolant to circulate when hot, the engine heats up rapidly. That would also explain the fans not coming on when hot. The hot water isn't circulating through the radiator. The fan sensor is in the bottom tank of the radiator, and if no hot water makes it down there, the fans won't come on. This engine would have survived just fine, if water had been flowing through the radiator once it warmed up. The only concern with alternate fuels, is lubrication of the high pressure fuel pump. Surprisingly, the pump isn't what went wrong!
I did that once and before I caught it 4 gallons of gas mixed with 5 gallons of diesel seems not a problem ran fine and not a subsequent failure when I got back on diesel. I' did keep diluting it every 40 miles
You got a little lucky, but there was enough diesel that it would still compression ignite reliably, and had enough lubricity that the injection pump survived. Definitely not something I'd recommend doing, but I'm glad your engine survived. What was it? Volkswagen?
2 stroke fuel would be interesting too
With pre mix oil? That's just what I was thinking.
It runs fine, done it before
You actually have to add 2 stroke oil to rotary engines to lube the veins on the triangle piston
The injection pump would like the oil much better than just plain gas
The gasoline causes the diesel engine to run hotter than normal because it lacks the lubricants that diesel and oil have. Part of the cooling factor of a diesel engine is the diesel itself. That combined with the cylinders being washed down with gasoline makes for very bad things.
Let's not forget the main factor- preignition
You hear how the engine was galloping when trying to be started? That engine was already hurt before the video started.
No way.
I heard it, too. It was a small comfort to know that at least they weren't about to destroy a perfectly good motor.
I wonder if you could run it on 100LL. It's 100 octane gasoline with TEL. It's used on general aviation aircraft and the lead is specifically there to prevent petrol knock, but will also provide lubrication which petrol does not.
No. The main problem is that 100 octane gasoline, with or without lead, is designed specifically to be highly resistant to compression ignition. "Petrol knock" is compression ignition, and is the only ignition a diesel engine uses. As such, it won't ignite reliably, and when it does, it will almost always be at the wrong time, hence it behaves very badly and damages the engine very quickly if you try to push through like they did.
A company where I live switched over to used cooking oil from commercial deep friers. You knew when you were following one of their trucks because it smelled like popcorn.
18:05 the fact that you can still stand straight is crazy 😂
Haha. "Ah, why do need eye protection or respirators?"
Mercedes: ' Yea we're not gonna warranty that... ' 😂
Always nice to see the guys from Garage 54!
Best regards from Austria
thankyou for the english translations. I love this channel
Your channel makes me feel like a 10 year old boy again. Asking questions adults never wanted to answer. Keep up the fun work!
I cant believe how slow that is. Two stroke oil will work as diesel fuel
at 3.99 a half liter ill stick with diesel thanks
Brake fluid is Hydroscopic (absorbs water), so it can absorb H20 in the tanks (same with Ethanol). It won't make your engine run better but may allow it to pass H2O in the system and prevent the engine from stalling due to water in the system.
nice to see some more expensive and bigger projects
Somewhere, a Lada is on its knees, giving thanks and praise for dodging a bullet.
This made me laugh hard. I have never seen a Lada that was diesel, so I'd imagine that's how it dodged this one.
That looks knackered from the off!
Well, it landed up in Russia as a scrapped vehicle, so yes likely it was well done already. Now the garage has a project on rebuilding something not made by Lada or Trabant.
Speak English!
@@nicholasagnew2792 - knackered. Worn out. Totalled.
It was!
Nice looking Lada Niva ❤
That OM606 Turbo is apperantly hard to kill 🤣
I managed to put gasoline into a diesel tank. Only 10 liters. I realised what I have done, top it up with high quality diesel and I prayed. Next day was the pay check- long and rough start. 2 times did it. And when the tank was topped up couple of times with diesel the issue disappeared. Went to the mechanic who did a full computerised diagnosis and nothing wrong came out. I was lucky that I realised the mistake at an early stage. Volvo engine...D5. I have 185000 km and no issues. Be careful, fill up the tank with the correct fuel.
The Injectors on a Diesel Engine use the Diesel Fuel as Lubricant as well, putting Gasoline in the system, flushes the lubrication film, and destroys the Injectors.
After the Injectors died, the Engine it self died.
A Gasoline Car that's been started on Diesel will usually run fairly fine after flushing out the Diesel.
Not so much vise versa
Non-oily fuels used in a diesel engine end up washing the cylinder walls of lubrication, so they heat up faster, and then end up causing pistons to expand, trashing the cylinder walls and then seizing up into a boulder, that engine's toast... :P
How would you explain a gasoline engine not washing the cylinder walls out. I think it's more lubrication of the high pressure pumps
@@brysonshires9742 Diesel does lubricate the various pumps involved, but in the pistons and cylinders, things are a little different, as a diesel has thicker rings to maintain higher compression ratios thus more surface area that needs lubing, and this relies on the lubricity of the diesel fuel to aid in keeping them from scraping the cylinders, take away that oily fuel and the rings aren't being lubricated as fuels such as petrol or the starter fluid at the end wash the remnants of diesel off the walls, basically leaving the top of the pistons "dry", and of course this increases friction, friction generates heat, and so-on, petrol engines aren't as tight-fitting so can get away with thinner rings so less friction issues, and for petrol engines, there are lubricants in the fuel (again, these aid with the pumps) which help keep things sliding smoothly in the cylinders as well... :)
@@brysonshires9742 diesel overfuelling will wash cylinders also
@@spannaspinna completely different subject also
@@Guns_N_Gears diesel engines take longer to warm up because they are more efficient
I had a 1980 VW rabbit diesel, and the manual stated that in the winter, I was to add one gallon of unleaded gas during each diesel fill up! It worked well until I lost the car in the divorce!
that's not a loss
@@Oo-IIII-oO it was actually a nice car, although woefully underpowered. Driving from Westchester county New York on the New York thruway to BUFFALO , with the AC on, I frequently had to downshift from fifth gear to as low as third gear. The divorce cost me plenty though.
Shame. The rabbits are good
These guys are the Russian combination of Neutral Drop & WhistlinDiesel! Love it!
You can throw old Peg from Zip ties and Bias plies in there too
But they are better than wistlhlin. That guy is a wacko out of his mind
I'm sure that Whistlindiesel escaped from an asylum though, unlike these blokes.
@@mareksinister 🤣🤣🤣
I run one of my diesels on used motor oil quite often and it runs fine, but after a while junk accumulates and it'll smoke 'till it gets cleaned out with diesel fuel. The oil works best on highway driving where the temperature and RPM are high.
This engine at the end of the video looks exactly like the GAZ-53A engine - V8, 4.2 liter gasoline with 120 hp. and a 4-speed manual gearbox. It will be even better if it is from the ZIL 130 - 6.0 liters with 150 horses and a 5-speed manual gearbox. Either way, it will be a lot of fun to put this type of Soviet engine in a Mercedes-Benz G Class!
Its such a shame they don't have big block Chevys over there
That was 1 tough lil diesel engine.
Those are. Legends of toughness, those old Mercedes diesels. I wish they were still made.
Gasoline burns much faster than Diesel fuel, the problem was injection timing, with a gas engine you need timing to be at least 10-2 degrees before top dead center of piston travel, and a Diesel engine injects almost at top dead center, so the gasoline had already burned up by the time 20 degrees after top dead center was reached, and the air was not regulated by a throttle, so it could burn very hot.
You can use waist motor oil in a diesel if you mix it with 1/3 diesel, it will have more power too.
Thx for the video! Probably gonna try it out this weekend and report back 🙂
Ether (starting fluid) burns very fast, that’s why it’s helpful for recalcitrant engines. Small amounts do no harm….but if you need it you have other issues to look into.
Yes it ran on all oily fuels but Gasoline is a dry fuel and overheated due to lack of lubrication in fuel. That's why Gas cars blow smoke with added oil fuels but recover when oil is diluted from fuel. No lubrication in a new diesel just destroys high pressure pumps and compression and is not recoverable.
I'm really surprised how well it ran on engine oil!
Gr8 video, that quick start liquid can be removed from the can using a piercing pliers- can tap pliers, it hugs the aerosol can, when locking the pliers around the aerosol can, the piercing device punches a partial hole in the metal, and the rubber seals against the outside of the aerosol can, this can tap pliers has a sae 1/4" port to attach to an airconditioning charging manifold, that way you can have a controlled release of the aerosol's contents ...and that quick start fluid, when injected into a car's airconditioning system, mixing with the refrigerant gas, the a/c starts working ice cold after some time using it, possibly cleaning out the condensor from the inside
Wow, someone invented a scarier combination than conventional refrigerant and propane (fake refrigerant)-conventional refrigerant and starting fluid! That's a terrifying combination. Starting fluid is the most easily ignited chemical sold commonly to consumers, and you're mixing it with conventional refrigerant, which produces some of the most deadly combustion byproducts produced by anything accessible to consumers. Hence, you're exponentially increasing the odds of a refrigerant fire in an accident, making those deadly gases that much more likely to form right next to you and whoever else was involved in the accident. Also, if a future owner who isn't a DIYer takes this mixture to a shop, I shudder to think what it would do to their equipment, and there is no way they could reuse that chemical soup, which would be very expensive for them to have destroyed.
If you didn't get the hint, this is extremely dangerous, probably violates Federal law (and is definitely illegal in certain states which prohibit the use of flammable refrigerants in motor vehicles) and is just generally a very bad idea. Please stop!
@@edifyguy i take it ur from a first world country ...come over here to the 3rd and 4th world countries and see how things are done. PS , immigrants from here in your heaven of a country are already doing these type of stuff....🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
@@ArvineHarry I'm aware that in other countries there is a certain amount of ......creativity that takes place just to get by. I honestly am all for that, and do some myself, but there are limits to it. That combination is just particularly scary.
If you really want a cheap and effective refrigerant, use 60% propane and 40% isobutane to completely replace your conventional refrigerant. It's much less flammable than starting fluid, and doesn't produce anything toxic if it does catch fire. It's also super cheap, and many say it works better than R-134, on par with R-12. It used to be sold in this country as R-12a, but got banned from being sold under that name. Allegedly it was about safety. However, it's still a lot safer than R-anything plus starting fluid!
I used to use discarded vegetable oil in my 2005 VW golf, save a few bucks now and then and seemingly cleaned it up a bit...
I got a monumental headache just watching him empty the ethanol cans😂
Thats not ethanol my friend, that right there, is the Cosby sauce. Ether my friend, scent of the fairies, one good whiff of that stuff, and your mind will be asking your body how much it had to drink. Stone sober with little to no control over your body, like a bad trip on Qualudes.
@@leon419 "How much cosby sauce? ALL OF IT!"
@@Wasmachineman Minty!!!!
Yeah, science approach to ur experiments is what really sells me.
I hope you guys replace the intake valves with check valves. 19th century engines would do that, with how high compression can be today, it might not be so bad.
NOOOOOOOOOOOOO! NOT THE PooR OM606!!....
Lol?Its broken anyway..
Hate it that the Cosby sauce killed that OM606 at the end.
That engine was very dead already.......the ether just buried it.
This happen on my f250 when my works put 87 in the tank and it takes diesel. The truck was hauling 14k pounds and it drove on gas for about 40 minutes before it started to miss fire and heard a Hugh pop and the truck die and didn't want to start up. Had to take it to the mechanic and do a flush. Thank God the engine didn't get messed up
That was one tough truck to survive that! What year/engine was it?
@@edifyguy 6.7 2015
@@edifyguy almost 400k miles and running still super strong
@@XllllllllX- I'm glad to hear that the 6.7 is built Ford tough. I've heard mostly good things about them.
Amazing how my lawnmower stops smoking when it's off LOL. I think this VIDEO GOT A NINE
The main ingredient in Quickstart is dyetheleather. These guys' eye's were so red. I bet they got super stoned from it. 😅
Diethyl ether. For anyone who was wondering what dye the leather is.
@@anchopanchorancho No the original comment was correct. It's dyetheleather. Source: I'm a scholor of the English language, among other things...
@@conspiracyscholor7866 That's great, but the scientific name is Di - Ethyl Ether
Lol, you have to love these responses 🤣
@@leon419 HIGHLY doubtful.
Running gasoline in a diesel engine is a bit hard on it, even for engines designed to run on both fuels. Those engines recommended that you always treat the gasoline with motor oil when using it. The good news is it doesn't have to be fresh motor oil, it can be filtered, but used motor oil. Mechanically injected diesels are also better for this type of experiment. Another fuel you should try is to use butane and or Propane vapor in the engine after warm up. Obviously, you want to use vapor so if you use butane, this will be a summer experiment. You will not have to mix in motor oil if vapor is used as it will not wash the cylinder walls. In winter, compressed natural gas would be a better option as it is still a gas even at colder temps.
I have an old CJ-7 that I switch between diesel and petrol, regularly. I just have to adjust the timing when I switch fuels, which is as easy as a turn of the wrist on a CJ-7.
I know what’s wrong with it, it’s got gas in it
Diesel adds a whole lot of lubrication to the system, gas is as good at cleansing oil from cylinder walls as diesel is at lubing them; the extra friction is what caused excess heat. The ether in the starting fluid wears on the, typically, vanadium alloys that are used in cylinder linings
Vlad is the only person on earth who uses 16x as many words as he actually needs to for expressing an idea.
ahh yea that old Merc diesel engine sound ... its incomparable :D
The look on his face @ 18:32 is priceless.
Zip ties, tape and worm clamps... love it!
used to add up to 10% petrol to vegetable oil to stop it freezing in the winter time and it ran fine in an old citroen xud diesel engine with a bosch fuel pump and a 12 volt dc heat exchanger. the problem with petrol in a diesel engine is there is not enough lubrication for the pump diesel oil is very oil rich and energy dense. Modern High pressure diesel injection systems wont tolerate petrol because of the fuel pressure being to low. it is hard to run one on even engine oil or vegetable oil, older engines pre 1998 do a lot better. Before HDi engines.
Someone right now at Mercedes is having a massive heartache over this episode
Petrol in a diesel will destroy the injector pump as petrol does not have the lubrication properties that diesel has. Mate found out the hard way.
Used engine oil somehow works in diesel engines, I use it from time to time with my diesel car. Just filter it and pour into the tank, engine runs very smooth. I usually mix it with 2-stroke oil and diesel and never had any issues
The gasoline fuel needs a specific amout of air to fuel ratio in order to either burn cool and make sufficent power.
Diesel engines control the amount of fuel injected, and they usually have a completely unrestricted intake with loads of air. This means you can only control the AF ratio with the throttle pedal. You would either be running it too lean and overheating the engine, or running it too rich and bogging down. Usually the fuel map in a gasoline car controls the fuel injected, but in this case it was the throttle and only the throttle, while the amount of air was controlled by the rpm only.
The stopwatch guy had an old 25 year old Nokia brick phone. 🤣🤣
That's the cover of his phone.
Thank you guys!!
get an old tech diesel and put a large motorbike carb/injector on the intake and run as normal, the diesel igniting is the spark plug, two torque curves.
im putting LPG and turbo on my old diesel to clean the smog up a bit, its an Australian truck thing....
Peg from zip ties and biased plies would be proud of you guys running a diesel on pure Cosby sauce at the end.
The diesel engine was originally designed to run on peanut oil
I have ran waste cooking oil in the past in idi engine, poured straight from the drum with only a sandbag over the drum as a filter, 10 litres of diesel & 50 litres of wvo.. No starting issues, ran perfect for years.. Would like to see how far a common rail can be pushed,engines like or similar Bmw M47, volvo d5244t, toyota 1cd-ftv or 1nd-tv e.t.c
Do not add brake fluid to diesel. It can damage rubber seals, pump seals, fuel sensors, exhaust sensors, and these things can cause ECU problems, not to mention leaks and very expensive repairs. 2 cycle oil can help marginally to lubricate injectors and pumps, but brake fluid has NO place inside an engine.
Yes diesels run very well on motor oil. The cheap way to do it is to use used motor oil. You run a garage so you would have plenty. You just need to filter it. I used to do this with my 60 series Land cruiser.
We run vehicles on waste motor oil all the time. You just have to filter it well.
Also, transmission fluid is much much better than diesel (so is wmo)
The real intersting stuff happens when you cut it. 10% of x, 20% of y ect.
That was censored a runaway diesel at the end of the video. Its when the diesel engine intake gets wide up and runs until it overheats and cease.
As an American, I love your channel!
old motor oil filtered and mixed with little gasoline is called Black Diesel....
afaik, most diesel cars,trucks etc will run on it just fine....sometimes you need better fuel filter....
No lubrication to the injector pump -- galled, seized, ruined.
The main first concern is injection pump lubricity.
Poor G Wagon!
She deserve a better destiny
nah they are everywhere
Did you see what they did with it? It's better lol
My wife put diesel in our Tundra (about 20L) and it was a bit sluggish and chuggy...needless to say I threw a full tank in and diluted it out, been fine ever since😎
Non electronic diesels will run on any mineral based oil however synthetic oils do not burn well and will gum it up quickly.
If you put like a lot of 2cycle oil in that gas like 1/1 ratio it might have not burned up the injection pumps
Damm it’s suprising it even lasted that long
I have always been curious if a diesel will run on gas with less injector advance and some 2 stroke gas.
you would still need lubrication. try a 20% gasoline mix.
or you could go with a 10-15% ethanol mix.
ethanol mix will make the diesel look like cartoon radioactive waste.
or you can add some 2 stroke oil or regular motor oil to gasoline, might run much better then
To run a diesel on kerosene or petrol you add 1/200 of 2 stroke oil, I did run a Mazda 626 Diesel for 2 years on kerosene using that mix. If you do not add oil it will ruin the diesel fuel pump and that is very expensive to fix as the fuel pump on a diesel is very special and run extremely high pressures injecting fuel at precisely times moments.
y .