heating oil?

heating oil?


heating oil?
Oil hits new 26-month high point
Oil prices hit another 26-month peak on Friday, lifted by freezing weather and upbeat US data, before pulling lower on profit-taking before the Christmas and New Year break.
Heating oil?

How long does heating oil stay good in a tank?

I would say that after a year you should add conditioners to whats in the tank. You should actually call a local heating oil supplier in your area and they can give you very specific information. If you need any additives they can tell you exactly what you need. I have used diesel fuel that was several years old.

Green Pirate: Episode VII – Bio-Heating Oil

Heating For Home

[SMP_MESSAGE]

Related posts:

  1. Solar Heating Home solar heating home Heating our home!? We are looking at making our home eco friendly and would like to ask if anyone knows where we can start! What would be the best way to heat our home, and the best energy supplier or way of supplying energy? Solar heating, solar power, wood burner, gas, electricity [...]...
  2. how much will my electric and heating oil bills be for each month? i just bought a house of 3000 sqft. how much should i expect these bills to be each month? how many times do i need to fill the oil tank per year? Admin @ www.HeatingForHome.com [SMP_MESSAGE]...
  3. What can I do if I was charged for heating oil that wasn’t delivered? I scheduled a 150 gallon oil delivery with a supplier in the Poconos of PA–email me if you want their name. The fuel gauge on my tanks hasn’t moved, and it’s not stuck. The oil was never delivered. They claim it was. I’m running out of heating oil, and they charged my bank card for [...]...

4 Responses to “heating oil?”

  1. wellaem Says:

    you might be able to sell your oil to a private party, but I doubt a commercial company would buy it for fear of contamination, or the presence of water in the tank. I believe companies are also obligated to their suppliers for their oil.

  2. Sunshine Says:

    I seriously doubt if an oil company would purchase oil that they can’t confirm if it’s good still. Oil does ‘go bad’ in a sense. Algae and condensation get in it and they would be held accountable if they bought it from you and sold it to someone else and their system failed because of it. Just call a waste oil company and have them pump it out and dispose of it properly.

  3. candyman Says:

    sell it privately. Most oil dealers will not buy the oil, but you can try to sell it back to whoever you bought it from

  4. bobo Says:

    Most times you’ll have to pay to pump it out, and pay to have the tank removed and pay to have the hazardous tank disposed of. OR— find someone with oil heat who is willing to get it out of your tank in 5 gallon containers, and someone who needs a new tank!

Leave a Reply