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#1044041 07/22/2014 12:15 PM
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Does kerosene ever go bad? I have an old 5 gallon can about a 1/3 full probably 50 years old.

Bruce


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55 1st suburban #1044045 07/22/2014 12:45 PM
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I'd use it for cleaning up greasy parts and then use the rest to help burn my brush piles.

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Old Kerosens should be just fine...it does not spoil or go bad.

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...but some of it will have a smell if you burn it in a kerosene heater.


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Speaking of Kerosene, I had to quit using my Kerosene heater here in Mississippi. The cost of it is like $8.00 per gal. I put in a propane heater and it's ONLY about $3.00 per gal. Just thought I'd throw that in.


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Speaking of Kerosene. For every gallon of kerosene burned in an
unvented kerosene heater, 1.1 gallons of water is produced.
Don't ask me how it does that, I got that information from
the Clemson U site:
http://www.clemson.edu/psapublishing/pages/fyd/HL256.pdf

I do know that the new salamander that I bought to take the chill
off in the pole barn, produced enough humidity that literally
all of the bare metal in a 42x50x12 building rusted over in a
couple of days of using it. Needless to say, it was a mistake and
I should have put the money toward a vented wood burning furnace.
Now all of my wood, and metal working machines and
steel stock is covered with rust.

DG


Last edited by Denny Graham; 08/15/2014 3:57 PM.

Denny G
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LPG and LNG also create more humidity, it's a result of the 'splitting' of oxygen in the combustion process, replacing it with CO2 and H2O, un-vented open flame heating is never a good thing

Bill


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It will probably have high sulfur and stink a bit.

Use it as a parts cleaner.

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Bruce --

Kerosene is a petroleum distillate not unlike gasoline, fuel oil, etc. All these distillates are composed of a range of different length hydrocarbon chains. Shorter chains, lower boiling point, more fumes. Assuming the container isn't perfectly sealed, the light fractions will evaporate leaving a higher percentage of the heavier stuff.

Your old Kero is fine but it may behave a little more like No. 2 Fuel Oil, e.g. a little more stink, little more soot, little harder to light than it really should.

As for the humidity, Mr. Graham is right on. Hydrocarbons are just that -- a bunch of hydrogens bound to carbon atoms. When they burn the H-C and C-C bonds break and form new ones with oxygen. The carbon mostly winds up as CO2 and CO but the hydrogen mostly winds up as water (H2O). There's a lot more H than C hence all the water.

Sorry for the chemistry babble. Short story is that it should be fine for nearly all purposes but may stink a bit.

Pete P.
Harborcreek, Penna.


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