dgeist wrote:
BiodieselJeep.com wrote:
mercifully, BioD doesn't "eat" most hard plastics. PVC and other common car plastics are fine. The soft "rubber" plastics you have to be careful about. But almost any modern vehicle since 1995 has bio-proof components...expecially european parts.
HDPE is used for strong methl-esther storage, is it not? Assuming similar makeup, I would think that the sensor would be fine even long term, especially since it was designed to go into a diesel that's certified from the car maker to be okay with 5% bio... regardless, I've spilled B100 on my paint a few times and have gotten it off within 10 minutes with no ill effects, so I think the "eat your plastic" effect is a lot more long term than anything you would have done.

Polyethylenes and polypropylenes seem to work pretty well with biodiesel. CPVC does not, and even some PVC is iffy for long term exposure. PVC seems to turn brittle and crack rather than melting, though. In any case, for this cleaning it was probably fine, but if there is a thin coating of paint or an insulating coating on the sensor itself, the biodiesel might go through that in very short order. Many things might: brake cleaner, etc. On my MAP, it cleaned up well using ethyl alcohol, which is a relatively safe solvent.
HTH,