Rich: this sounds like "abandon all hope..."Recirculation polishing by itself will be of NO benefit in cleaning up a fuel system contaminated with common 'kerosene fungus' - Cladosporium Resinae, etc. which is a spore forming fungus and the spores (and other divisible fragments) will be in the range of 2-3 micrometers.
To decontaminate you must reduce the biomass living inside the tank on the tank walls ... usually a thick growing mat of fungus and its (black resinous) products of metabolism - dead fungus, living fungus, fungal spores and 'asphalt-like' cellular, etc. waste.
Two ways to remove the asphaltic waste, etc.:
1. Drain the tank, Open the tank access ports and mechanically scrub the insides. Soak up the 'debris' with paper towels and either burn them (where lawfully permitted) or send to a hazardous waste disposal. No need to be 'anal' in the cleaning out, just get out 'most' of it, a wee bit of chemical tank cleaner and biocide in the future will keep down the growth. A fairly thorough mechanically cleaning exponentially reduces those 'living particles' that grow.
As mentioned, this isn't an option without some serious surgery.
1a. alternate if the tank has no access ports. To the contaminated oil, add the proper amount of a chemical tank cleaner such as Starbrite "Tank Cleaner" (
http://shop.sailboatowners.com/prod.php?17903),
add compatible biocide, mix thoroughly and let the tank sit for 1-2 WEEKS. Then agitate the tank contents and drain the tank. Add a few gallons of new oil, slosh around and then drain.
Here's what Bio Kleen instructs: SHOCK TREATMENT OF DIESEL FUEL BULK-STORAGE OR EQUIPMENT TANKS: Treat total capacity of each tank – not the amount of fuel in the tank at the time of treatment. Add 1 ounce of Bio Kleen to each 20 gallons of equipment fuel tank capacity (see treatment ratio chart on the other side). After treatment has been added, fill the tank with diesel fuel to maximum capacity so that the rising level of diesel fuel treats the entire interior walls of the tank. And: SHOCK TREATMENT AND MAINTENANCE TREATMENT: Recirculate fuel in tank for 30 minutes following treatment, if possible. Let diesel fuel set for eight hours before using to achieve maximum effectiveness. Treatment may result in additional accumulations of water and dead microbes at the bottom of the tank. If so, pump or drain tank bottoms to complete tank clean-up. So, that's why I was going to fill the tank to capacity, to get the walls with the biocide. I don't trust the return spray from my pump to handle that in the operation I planned.
If you have a home oil burner, take the contaminated oil home and use it your oil burner. Otherwise discard the oil, such as taking it to a 'reclaimer', etc.
This is a serious problem. I know of three Haz-mat sources and none will take diesel fuel. Ten years ago, I tried to get rid of about the same amount of stale gasoline, which is easier. One source would accept it one day per month, but only if you also gave them the containers. So, even if I could find some one to take it, at thirty bucks a piece, it would be a bit pricey to get rid of it. Still, I'll work on that further since I agree dumping the fuel and starting with fresh sounds smart.
3. Blow out the entire fuel delivery hosing/tubing all the way up to and including your 15µM engine mounted 'guard filter', (discard & change your 'racors', engine guard filter, etc.)
4. THEN partly refill the tank with NEW oil and THEN recirculate polish the NEW oil (plus residual fragments from 'cleaning') until the oil (sample) when held up in a clear glass container in front of strong white light shows absolutely NO 'haze'.
The good news is that the fuel I removed from the secondary filter looked pristine.
Recircualtion polishing should be to less than 1-2µM (the spores and other 'divisible reproductive fragments' will be approximately 3µM). The recirculation polishing rate should be in the neighborhood of 3 gallons per MINUTE per 100 gallons of tank volume through your 9µM (???) filters for approx 6 hours MINIMUM. or a total of ~1000 total gallons passed through the 'filters' (per 100 gallon tank) to obtain a
residual level of approx. 1-2µM particles in the tank. Doing this with a fuel 'delivery' pump (1-3 gallons per HOUR) will take you ~40 days of constant pumping at 1 gallon per
hour to pass ~1000 gallons filtered!!!!
I'll have to think on this. I can certainly rig something along the lines of what Rich S. suggested to circulate the fuel continuously for whatever time is necessary.
(FWIW - Id seek out a 'filter' that has published or listed filtration efficiency such as 5µM 90% efficiency, rather than blindly and wishfully guessing what that 'nominal' 9µM is actually ... if these 9µM filter were obtained from an auto store or auto supply and were
NOT made in China, my educated SWA-guess would that they are 9µM 80% efficiency ... or about 30µM at 95% efficiency. There's lots of filter jargon only speakable by filter geeks. Racors, fairly high quality automotive filters are only efficient to about 95-97% removal at their 'µM rating')
The filter I have is a large, high capacity marine dual cannister filter. I am going to use Baldwin filters which are made both in the USA and in China, but within their own factory, not outsourced. I got the micron specs directly from their engineering department. Baldwin PF942 & PF943. I really don't know what else to do.
Note - you will not be able to recirculation polish the 'old fuel' down to 'visual clarity' (no haze) due to the (black) dissolved & suspension of submicronic fungal fragments and asphaltic components. Plus being unable to reach 'visual clarity' you will be 'unsure' of the efficacy of recirculation polishing due to the 'black'. If you 'must' use the old oil ..... Only long term (6 hours, etc.) recirculation polish the old fuel and return it to the tank if getting rid of it will be costly or a royal pain in the butt. If you must return the old fuel to the tank then consider to greatly extend the 6 hour recirculation time ... and use your engine as much as possible to get rid of the old fuel. DO NOT top off the old fuel, use it up as quickly as possible and only fill the tank with new when youre nearly 'empty' of old fuel. Take extra 'racors' along with you if you added Chemical Cleaners to the tank as large 'chunks' of accumulated 'softened' (and undissolved by the tank cleaner) bio-mass can break loose from the tank walls.
See my previous note re: Bio Kleen's instruction to fill the tank up. It does look to me like I may have to do this a couple of times. Fortunately, the fuel itself looks clear ad red downstream of the filters, so hopefully, I'll make progress.
Rich, thanks so much for your comments. It may turn out that I have to do all this several times and maybe it won't work either. But, I have to start someplace, and this looks like a rational approach.