Originally Posted By: expat
Ford had a small Marine engine in the 60's called the Watermotor, you would start it on Gas then switch to Kerosine.
In England at that time, Kerosine cost less than Petrol.
The compression was about 7-1
Under the British tax system, kerosene was a heating fuel, and didn't attract transport taxes. If you used kero for power applications, off highway (farms, boats etc.), it was fine, but if you used it for road transport, you had to tally the gallons and send a tax cheque in (read that on the Rover BRM Gas Turbine car).
They do the same now with homemade biodiesel, and running cars on vegetable oil. Need to register with the tax office, keep auditable records, and pay the taxes.
Ford had a small Marine engine in the 60's called the Watermotor, you would start it on Gas then switch to Kerosine.
In England at that time, Kerosine cost less than Petrol.
The compression was about 7-1
Under the British tax system, kerosene was a heating fuel, and didn't attract transport taxes. If you used kero for power applications, off highway (farms, boats etc.), it was fine, but if you used it for road transport, you had to tally the gallons and send a tax cheque in (read that on the Rover BRM Gas Turbine car).
They do the same now with homemade biodiesel, and running cars on vegetable oil. Need to register with the tax office, keep auditable records, and pay the taxes.