Originally Posted By: Danh
1) "Stay away from operating vehicle in short trips with light engine loads. The reason for this is that the engine oil temperature does not get hot enough to boil off fuel and moisture in the crankcase. Running the engine at operating temperature and under load for long enough periods will allow the fuel to evaporate."
John Deere's other suggestion if to use high quality, fresh fuel.
Maybe John Deere has it all wrong, but they seem like a credible source to me.
Again, here's a diesel distillation curve
I think that their statement might be overly simplistic, and partially incorrect.
We had a JCB at work that was left idling for a shift not long after a rebuild, and the cylinders were scored as a result of cold operation, diesel washing the walls, and building sump level....worked, they don't dilute as much.
They might MEAN that low load operation leads to fuel dilution, in spite of what they are saying in overly simplistic terms.
I know that my Nissan can't be idled to warm-up after a coolant change, it needs 1,500 RPM, and there's a button on the dash for that.