fuel tanker man
Thread starter
Good questions.
Some stations do not have dispensers with the capability of blending the premium and regular, so at these stations the midgrade is blended as it is loaded onto the tanker truck.
Usually, if you see a blue colored ground tank cover that's a midgrade gasoline tank, which means that the pumps don't blend it; it's blended as it is loaded onto the truck.
Some stations may have different color codes but the standard seems to be white caps for regular unleaded, blue for midgrade, and red for premium. Yellow would be diesel. But as mentioned, some stations may be different. You might look in some semi-conspicuous place on the station's front window or near where the ground tanks are located to see a tank color chart.
If a station which blends midgrade at the pump runs out of regular--as far as my experience goes--the dispenser will not pump pure premium alone. This might, however, depend on the type of blending dispenser being used, so don't quote me on that.
We did have a driver screw up once and he unloaded 8700 gallons of premium into the regular no lead tank. The station decided to bill the difference to the transportation company and they went on and sold the gasoline at regular no-lead prices.
And yes, I filled up all of my vehicles that afternoon.
Dan

Some stations do not have dispensers with the capability of blending the premium and regular, so at these stations the midgrade is blended as it is loaded onto the tanker truck.
Usually, if you see a blue colored ground tank cover that's a midgrade gasoline tank, which means that the pumps don't blend it; it's blended as it is loaded onto the truck.
Some stations may have different color codes but the standard seems to be white caps for regular unleaded, blue for midgrade, and red for premium. Yellow would be diesel. But as mentioned, some stations may be different. You might look in some semi-conspicuous place on the station's front window or near where the ground tanks are located to see a tank color chart.
If a station which blends midgrade at the pump runs out of regular--as far as my experience goes--the dispenser will not pump pure premium alone. This might, however, depend on the type of blending dispenser being used, so don't quote me on that.

We did have a driver screw up once and he unloaded 8700 gallons of premium into the regular no lead tank. The station decided to bill the difference to the transportation company and they went on and sold the gasoline at regular no-lead prices.


Dan