I doubt if these high standards would be upheld here. Recently a bloke came to our farm from Launceston to pick up 1000L of milk in a cube. He has a '85ish Nissan Patrol flat tray with an SD33 turbo engine. He filled up with diesel at a local servo and made 10km before the thing died. I towed him to the farm and we stuffed around for a couple of hrs bleeding the system etc until it became apparent that the fuel was to blame. A full tank of diesel went into 20L drums for me to to use as a cleaning agent because that was all it was good for. I put some clean diesel into his tank, bled the system and off he went no trouble at all. Last year a guy in a brand new Iveco camper broke down on a hill 1km from the farm. He walked back and I had a look at his problem. Same thing. I rigged up a can of diesel to gravity feed to his fuel filter and got him home so that I could drain, refill and bleed his system. He and his mrs ended up staying at our B$B for 5 days so I was adequately compensated for my trouble . Don't know where he filled up.
Yeah... So these anecdotes just illustrate that fuel quality cannot be relied upon. The further you're out in the sticks, the less diesel goes through the servo's tanks, the older the tanks themselves are and the lack of filtration and water separation.... the greater that chances of damage.
But for the owner of a new high-tech European diesel this is a worrying situation. If you have a problem it's all too easy for the dealer to blame the fuel while you are the innocent victim.
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