DERV = Diesel Engine Road Vehicle fuel - contains 3 basic components. I don't know the chemical names, but when they mixed "laboratory standard DERV" in the chemistry Lab at work for testing other materials, they took a very large percentage of the correct diesel oil (A heavy paraffin oil?), A lubricant, some "starter" chemical (Aromatic?). (Not Ether, but another something that ignites at a lower temperature and initiates combustion before the base oil flashes...??. This is the stuff that is volatile but gives road fuel it's distinctive "sharp" smell. Compare year-old fuel from a plastic container with fresh fuel, for smell!). I don't really understand Cetane booster, but I found this on the web- "
Diesel fuel that readily burns, or has good ignition quality, improves cold start performance. The cetane number of the fuel defines its ignition quality. It is believed that fuels meeting the ASTM D 975 Standard Specification for Diesel Fuel Oils minimum cetane number requirement of 40 provide adequate performance in modern diesel engines. The minimum cetane number in Europe is 51.". So that answers that one!
Also: "
Fuel properties can affect combustion noise directly. " "
By increasing the cetane number of the fuel, the knock intensity is decreased by the shortened ignition delay. Fuels with high cetane numbers ignite before most of the fuel is injected into the combustion chamber. The rates of heat release and pressure rise are then controlled primarily by the rate of injection and fuel-air mixing, and smoother engine operation results."
I understand that there are seasonal additives, e.g. a de-waxing additive that is used to make "Winter" and cold-climate fuel, and an additive to increase lubricity.... that helps preserve the longevity of the fuel pump and injectors. But these extra things are not always in "basic DERV", as the vary company by company and by season.
Look-up Wiki, etc. for more information. This interested me:
https://www.chevron.com/-/media/chevron/operations/documents/diesel-fuel-tech-review.pdfI watched a programme on TV where they tried Cooking oil replacement for diesel cars... A gallon of your regular supermarket oil, with a coffee cup of regular "turpentine substitute" paint thinners - to act as the "Starter aid". Apparently, cooking oil is only good on hot engines without the cup of "turps"...?
However, I was advised by an engine guy, that cooking oil makes a dirty engine - can produce gum that affects injectors, pump valves, etc. and leaves deposits inside the combustion chamber that you don't see with "proper DERV". The lubricity of vegetable oil may be low, and pump and injector wear can shorten the life of these components by half - or more (!). Do your on-line research first? (I may be wrong, - just what someone said...?).
K2