Petrol in Diesel Car

Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

61 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
I had about 56 miles of diesel left in my 2014 Vauxhall Mokka and stupidly picked up the petrol nozzle (not concentrating) and topped it up to 169 miles with petrol before I realised it was petrol and stopped filling. I managed to drive the 4 miles home ok. I know I shouldn’t have driven it but I desperately needed to get back to my kid. Should I get a fuel drain? Top it up with diesel? Is this my car ruined? Any help appreciated!

Fermit

13,240 posts

107 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
hkt2024 said:
I had about 56 miles of diesel left in my 2014 Vauxhall Mokka and stupidly picked up the petrol nozzle (not concentrating) and topped it up to 169 miles with petrol before I realised it was petrol and stopped filling. I managed to drive the 4 miles home ok. I know I shouldn’t have driven it but I desperately needed to get back to my kid. Should I get a fuel drain? Top it up with diesel? Is this my car ruined? Any help appreciated!
Advice from experience. A few years ago my wife put £30 of petrol in our then 2015 Insignia diesel. She brimmed it with diesel ASAP, and never experienced any later issue. Just what happened to her, YMMV.

Bold edited, for fat fingers.

Edited by Fermit on Thursday 23 May 19:26

eliot

11,727 posts

261 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
Fermit said:
Advice from experience. A few years ago my wife put £30 of petrol in our then 2015 Insignia diesel. She brimmed it with petrol ASAP, and never experienced any later issue. Just what happened to her, YMMV.
Might want to re-read that

sunbeam alpine

7,079 posts

195 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
Fermit said:
hkt2024 said:
I had about 56 miles of diesel left in my 2014 Vauxhall Mokka and stupidly picked up the petrol nozzle (not concentrating) and topped it up to 169 miles with petrol before I realised it was petrol and stopped filling. I managed to drive the 4 miles home ok. I know I shouldn’t have driven it but I desperately needed to get back to my kid. Should I get a fuel drain? Top it up with diesel? Is this my car ruined? Any help appreciated!
Advice from experience. A few years ago my wife put £30 of petrol in our then 2015 Insignia diesel. She brimmed it with petrol ASAP, and never experienced any later issue. Just what happened to her, YMMV.
I hope you meant brimmed it with diesel - not petrol! smile

OP - This is what I would do - get a friend to drive you to get diesel (don't drive the car any further) and fill it with diesel. Then when the tank is about 3/4 full refuel again with diesel. Each time you do this the petrol will be diluted and hopefully you won't have any damage.

Years ago people would add a small amount of petrom to diesel in the winter to prevent the diesel becoming waxy.

ConnectionError

1,946 posts

76 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
I think you may have too much petrol to dilute with diesel

I would drain and refill

Fermit

13,240 posts

107 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
eliot said:
Might want to re-read that
Oh bks! Petrol, yes, that's what I meant.

GreenV8S

30,481 posts

291 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
ConnectionError said:
I think you may have too much petrol to dilute with diesel

I would drain and refill
That. ^^^

Pica-Pica

14,468 posts

91 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
I would maybe risk 5 litres of petrol in a diesel vehicle if I could top up with another 45+ of diesel straightaway. Yours sounds too much petrol to risk it. Many insurance policies cover misfuelling, to the extent of getting it drained. Check there first.

Terminator X

16,332 posts

211 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
I put diesel in my petrol although spotted it at the station and didn't start the car. AA man drained it with a pump and suggested I fill completely with petrol then run it to half and fill again, basically dilute what is in there as much as possible.

TX.

Smint

1,988 posts

42 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Even if you top up fully with Diesel it will be something like 40/50% petrol mixture so i'd be inclined to get it drained, whether you, with or without the help of a mechanically minded, friend can manage this only you know.

The fuel is basically useless for you now, but said friend might be able to make use of it (gradually adding the mix to a petrol car a few litres every refill) so worth his time helping you out here.

Preferably don't drive it to the fuel station until there's more Diesel percentage in the tank than presently.

E-bmw

9,976 posts

159 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
GreenV8S said:
ConnectionError said:
I think you may have too much petrol to dilute with diesel

I would drain and refill
That. ^^^
^^^^ Wot 'e (they) said

ConnectionError

1,946 posts

76 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
I think you may have too much petrol to dilute with diesel

I would drain and refill

PlywoodPascal

5,386 posts

28 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Everyone saying drain and refill
How on earth are you supposed to tip the car over far enough to get the fuel back out?

Thats What She Said

1,180 posts

95 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
PlywoodPascal said:
Everyone saying drain and refill
How on earth are you supposed to tip the car over far enough to get the fuel back out?
Borrow a telehandler?


E-bmw

9,976 posts

159 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
PlywoodPascal said:
Everyone saying drain and refill
How on earth are you supposed to tip the car over far enough to get the fuel back out?
You are joking, aren't you?

LennyM1984

764 posts

75 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
E-bmw said:
You are joking, aren't you?
I hope they are...


Smint

1,988 posts

42 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Previous gen Vauxhalls it was quite easy to get to the fuel, under the rear seat (usually) is a plastic cover which just clips off, directly under that opening resides the sender unit, might be half a dozen screw bolts (8mm socket) or instead a large taper ring which you tap round or use a suitable large pair of grips to undo and the sender lifts up enough to get a syphon pipe in without disconnecting anything.
Can't help with later models but hopefully are of similar design.

The sender will have a large O ring seal, thanks to the petrol vapours it will probably now be bone dry, to get the sender reseated easily a wipe of spit on the O ring usually does the trick.


paintman

7,765 posts

197 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
E-bmw said:
PlywoodPascal said:
Everyone saying drain and refill
How on earth are you supposed to tip the car over far enough to get the fuel back out?
You are joking, aren't you?
Hopefully.
Unfortunately in this day & age not an assumption you can safely make! smile

GreenV8S

30,481 posts

291 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
I put diesel in my petrol
That way round is far less problematic. It may cause the engine to run badly (or not at all) until the fuel is replaced, but is unlikely to do any expensive damage.

Petrol in a diesel car can destroy the high pressure fuel pump, circulating metal swarf through the rest of the fuel system and requiring every single component to be replaced. It can easily cost thousands of pounds to repair.

Pica-Pica

14,468 posts

91 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
GreenV8S said:
Terminator X said:
I put diesel in my petrol
That way round is far less problematic. It may cause the engine to run badly (or not at all) until the fuel is replaced, but is unlikely to do any expensive damage.

Petrol in a diesel car can destroy the high pressure fuel pump, circulating metal swarf through the rest of the fuel system and requiring every single component to be replaced. It can easily cost thousands of pounds to repair.
It is also quite hard to do, unless a very old car.
Furthermore, more recent cars have a restrictor that even stops putting a (narrow) petrol nozzle into (wider) diesel filler neck.