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Rudolph Diesel in 1897. Go to wikipedia.org and type in "diesel engine" and it will tell you everything you want to know.
Not if you want it to run.
Rudolf Diesel. Yes he invented the engine. The fuel came later and was named after him but he didnt invent diesel fuel. His wife insisted he name the engine after himself, he didnt want to.
The truck's engine roared to life with the familiar rumble of a diesel.
how much tranny fluid are we talkin and why would you want to? the only time i would do this is if you have a old mechanical diesel engine then a little wont hurt
no... you don't want to mix diesel and gas engine parts if its not an exact match you can mess your engine up....
There's no such thing, really. It sounds to me like you want to burn bio-diesel, however. What you need is a diesel engine. If you've already got a diesel engine in your car, then you can fill 'er up with bio whenever you want. If your car is a gas burner, you're in for a very long and difficult project. If the latter, I'd recommend buying a diesel car.
Not if you want it to go anywhere. Diesel fuel will not burn in a gasoline engine.
Yes, its a hybrid petrol/diesel. put whatever you want in it. Give more details if you want a non-smartass answer. What type of vehicle, what size engine v8, straight L6, H4, I4, What WHAT!!
If you are looking to purchase a Kubota engine online but you want to learn about each engine to make sure you purchase the right model, there is a Kubota parts dealer website.
While being you have diesel that is a 1986?I have nothing to support that book wise.Because Mazda only made a diesel version from 82-84 that was a 2200.While this may be b2200 the only thing I can tell you is most of Mazda's engine ohc,and the 82-84 yr models the engine was made by Mitsubishi, and the 86 gas engine b2000 Mitsubishi.I am not sure what it is you want to know?I realize Mazda may have offered diesel in the 1986 model and it is not listed in my chiltons or haynes that I can find.If you need to clarify just click on the discussion tab on this post to reply back.
If you mean "in" the engine, as in "instead of motor oil," the answer's no. I guess you could probably put it on the engine, if you can explain why you'd want to.