RE: Taking the Pi$$
Monday 29th April 2002
Taking the Pi$$
Red diesel to become yellow to prevent tax evasion
Discussion
We run commercial vehicles, and every now and then, they'll get pulled over for a routine check by the M.O.T.. You see them in lay-bys on roads all over the country.
They often have someone from the DSS to check the driver is not claiming dole etc., they check the overall condition of the truck and the security of it's load, AND they take a sample from the tank.
They analyse the fuel using a mass spectrometer (basically shining polarised light into the fuel) and are able to detect the red dye with great accuracy. They reckon even if it was 50 tank-fulls back that you used red, they can tell. Fines can be extremely hefty - well over £10K for fleet operators.
The Irish (according to the media) have set about filtering out the red dye by running the diesel through cat litter (true, honest) but I guess perhaps yellow dye is harder to remove!
They often have someone from the DSS to check the driver is not claiming dole etc., they check the overall condition of the truck and the security of it's load, AND they take a sample from the tank.
They analyse the fuel using a mass spectrometer (basically shining polarised light into the fuel) and are able to detect the red dye with great accuracy. They reckon even if it was 50 tank-fulls back that you used red, they can tell. Fines can be extremely hefty - well over £10K for fleet operators.
The Irish (according to the media) have set about filtering out the red dye by running the diesel through cat litter (true, honest) but I guess perhaps yellow dye is harder to remove!
As pointed out it's not Police who care, it's Customs & Execise.
A major problem with being "done" for running on Red is that Customs & Execise will give you a criminal conviction for defrauding the treasury rather than a minor traffic offence. Think about that on your record.
Good place to spot them used to be any agricultural show up and down the land, bright yellow jackets, little squeezy bottle with tube on top in hand. They "dip" the tank by sucking some fuel into the bottle and check out the colour. They have tests that can detect minute residule amounts of Red in regular fuel, but it has to go to the lab for that.
Last trick I'd heard was mixing diesel from Eire with Red. Eire diesel is kind of yellow colour so dilutes the Red to kind of the colour of UK pump diesel...... but the Execise know about that too, so it's no escape boys and girls.
>> Edited by phil hill on Tuesday 30th April 13:59
A major problem with being "done" for running on Red is that Customs & Execise will give you a criminal conviction for defrauding the treasury rather than a minor traffic offence. Think about that on your record.
Good place to spot them used to be any agricultural show up and down the land, bright yellow jackets, little squeezy bottle with tube on top in hand. They "dip" the tank by sucking some fuel into the bottle and check out the colour. They have tests that can detect minute residule amounts of Red in regular fuel, but it has to go to the lab for that.
Last trick I'd heard was mixing diesel from Eire with Red. Eire diesel is kind of yellow colour so dilutes the Red to kind of the colour of UK pump diesel...... but the Execise know about that too, so it's no escape boys and girls.
>> Edited by phil hill on Tuesday 30th April 13:59
quote:
The Irish (according to the media) have set about filtering out the red dye by running the diesel through cat litter (true, honest) but I guess perhaps yellow dye is harder to remove!
Fullers Earth is what it's filtered through, it's the base material for Talcom Powder, Chemical Decontamination powder and I guess cat litter. It actually draws out the die from the diesel.
All apparently of course.

Years ago I ran a TR2 on parafin with a touch of Castrol R. Being closely related to a tractor the engine thrived on it but you needed to start it from cold on petrol. You could use the old Castrol R tin as an auxillary petrol tank with an SU petrol pump wired into the map light switch.
All very illegal but a TR2 was sufficiently fast to outrun local plod on an LE Velocette.

All very illegal but a TR2 was sufficiently fast to outrun local plod on an LE Velocette.

quote:
But it does put the Farmers protests about fuel costs in proportion.
How do you think all your food gets to Sainsburys . with a tonne of wheat worth currently around £60-65 what proportion does the fuel then cost to cart it from the farm to the mill or the port , a 40 tonne truck does what 8-10 mpg ? who actually ends up paying for the fuel ? the mug at the bottom of the food chain , thats who .
Fuel duty is suposedly levied to pay for the road system
we tractor drivers try to keep off the roads as you all know !!!!!
How about Eco-diesel?? made from "used" vegetable oil, it apparently has a higher fuel rating (like 98 RON as compared to 95 RON) so it makes ya go faster and its taxed at a much lower rate as its an "enviromental" fuel. Buy it in 1000 litre containers. www.ebony-solutions.co.uk if you're interested..
>> Edited by mondeoman on Wednesday 1st May 18:47
>> Edited by mondeoman on Wednesday 1st May 18:47
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