Anchoring Aboveground Farm Fuel Tanks in Kansas & Nebraska WindsHigh Plains weather patterns in Kansas and Nebraska regularly produce sustained winds above 30 mph and gusts exceeding 60–80 mph during storm events. In open agricultural settings with minimal windbreak protection, these forces can create uplift, sliding, and overturning risks for fuel storage systems. Proper anchoring of aboveground farm fuel tanks is essential to maintain structural stability, prevent environmental spills, and protect operational safety. This technical guide outlines wind c...
Proper Overhead Fuel Tank Stand Height for Colorado & Wyoming FarmsSelecting the correct overhead fuel tank stand height is critical for ensuring safe gravity flow, efficient fueling, and long-term structural stability—especially in Colorado and Wyoming, where elevation, wind exposure, and winter conditions create unique engineering challenges. An improperly sized farm fuel tank stand can lead to slow fuel flow, pump inefficiencies, structural stress, or safety hazards. This technical guide explains how to determine optimal gravity feed fuel tank height for ...
Concrete vs. Gravel Tank Pads in Georgia & Alabama Clay SoilsConcrete vs. Gravel Tank Pads in Georgia & Alabama Clay Soils In the Southeast, choosing the right farm tank pad, concrete vs gravel foundation, is not just about cost — it is about moisture control, soil stability, and long-term performance in high-clay environments. Georgia and Alabama soils often contain expansive red clay that retains water, swells when saturated, and shrinks during dry periods. These seasonal shifts directly impact fuel tank foundation stability. This practical guide...
Planning Tank Delivery Access for Rural Texas & Oklahoma PropertiesFuel storage on rural properties in Texas and Oklahoma requires more than selecting the right tank size. Proper fuel truck access planning, safe unloading space, and correct fuel tank fill port setup are critical to prevent delivery delays, property damage, and safety hazards. Many rural sites have narrow drives, soft soil, cattle guards, or tight turning radii that complicate tank delivery and refueling logistics. This professional guide outlines how to plan farm tank delivery access, fill h...
Farm Fuel Tank Pad Drainage Tips for Iowa & Illinois Spring ThawSpring thaw in the Midwest creates one of the most challenging conditions for farm fuel storage infrastructure. Freeze-thaw cycles, saturated soils, snowmelt runoff, and heavy spring rains can undermine foundations and create standing water around tanks. Proper farm fuel tank pad drainage design prevents erosion, reduces corrosion risk, and protects above-ground storage systems during Iowa and Illinois spring conditions. This guide outlines technical drainage and pad design considerations spe...
How to Install a Fuel Tank Grounding Rod (Without Failing Inspection)Installing a fuel tank grounding rod seems straightforward, yet it remains one of the most common reasons farms and facilities fail safety inspections—especially in winter. At Mills Equipment, compliance calls often come in after an inspector flags a grounding issue that the operator believed was already handled. In most cases, the rod exists, but the installation does not meet code intent, continuity requirements, or winter performance expectations. Grounding is not just about placing metal ...
Grounding & Bonding Fuel Tanks: What Inspectors Look for in WinterFuel tank inspections tend to increase during winter, and not by coincidence. Cold, dry air raises static electricity risk, while snow, frozen ground, and corrosion expose weaknesses in grounding and bonding systems that may go unnoticed the rest of the year. At Mills Equipment, compliance-related questions about grounding and bonding spike every winter—often after an inspection flags an issue that operators assumed was already “taken care of.” Grounding and bonding are not optional best prac...
Farm Fuel Tank Signage: Winter Compliance Mistakes That Trigger FinesFarm fuel tanks are often inspected more closely in winter than at any other time of year. Cold weather increases fire risk, static discharge potential, and emergency response concerns—prompting regulators, fire marshals, and insurers to look harder at fuel storage compliance. At Mills Equipment, one of the most common and frustrating inspection outcomes we see each winter involves signage. Not leaking tanks. Not fuel quality. Signage. Missing, faded, obstructed, or improperly placed signs ar...
Choosing the Right Micron Rating for Farm Diesel FiltersFuel filtration is one of the most overlooked factors in diesel equipment reliability—until something goes wrong. On farms across the U.S., especially in high-use regions like Colorado and Texas, clogged filters, injector wear, and unexpected downtime are often traced back to a simple mismatch between fuel conditions and filter micron rating. Mills Equipment works with agricultural operators nationwide who assume “a filter is a filter,” only to discover that improper farm diesel filter micron...
Diesel Algae in Farm Tanks: How It Starts and How to Kill ItDiesel fuel is often viewed as stable, long-lasting, and reliable—especially on farms where bulk storage tanks power tractors, harvesters, generators, and irrigation equipment. Yet across the U.S., and particularly in high-volume agricultural regions like Colorado and Texas, diesel contamination caused by microbial growth remains one of the most costly and misunderstood fuel problems. Mills Equipment works with operations nationwide that discover diesel algae only after equipment failures, cl...
Does Tank Color Really Affect Diesel Gelling in Cold Weather? Myth vs. Fact ExplainedEvery winter, the same question resurfaces across farms, fleets, and rural operations: does the color of a fuel tank really affect diesel gelling in cold weather? Black tanks are blamed for overheating fuel in summer and blamed again for failing in winter. White tanks are praised for staying cooler, while green and tan tanks sit somewhere in between. At Mills Equipment, this topic comes up every year during cold-weather prep conversations, often right after an unexpected no-start or fuel flow...
Desiccant Breathers: Cheap Insurance Against Winter Condensation in Farm Fuel TanksWinter fuel problems are rarely caused by cold alone. In most cases, moisture is the real enemy. Condensation inside farm fuel tanks leads to ice buildup, restricted airflow, corrosion, and unexpected equipment downtime. At Mills Equipment, winter service calls related to fuel issues consistently trace back to one root cause: uncontrolled moisture inside storage tanks. One of the most effective and affordable ways to prevent these problems is the use of desiccant breathers—often described by ...
Why Farm Fuel Tank Vents Freeze in Winter — and How to Stop It for GoodWinter fuel problems rarely start with dramatic failures. More often, they begin quietly—slower fueling, unexplained equipment stalls, or pumps that seem to struggle for no clear reason. At Mills Equipment, these symptoms are among the most common cold-weather issues reported by farmers, fleet managers, and agricultural operations across the region. One of the most overlooked causes behind these disruptions is a frozen farm fuel tank vent. Fuel tanks are engineered to breathe. Every gallon of...
NFPA 30/30A for Farms: What Actually Applies to On-Farm FuelingFuel storage on farms has always carried unique risks. Diesel and gasoline are flammable, environmentally hazardous, and heavily regulated. But when farmers research safe storage practices, they quickly run into references to NFPA 30 (Flammable and Combustible Liquids Code) and NFPA 30A (Code for Motor Fuel Dispensing Facilities and Repair Garages). These codes are industry standards for fuel storage and dispensing—but not everything in them directly applies to farm fueling. At Mills Equipmen...
Preventing Phase Separation in Ethanol Gas for Small EnginesEthanol-blended gasoline has become standard across the United States, with E10 (10% ethanol, 90% gasoline) now the most common fuel at retail pumps. While this fuel works well in cars and trucks designed for it, small engines on farms—such as mowers, ATVs, augers, generators, and other equipment—are more vulnerable to problems caused by ethanol. The biggest concern is phase separation, when water mixes with ethanol in gasoline, separates from the fuel, and causes starting issues, corrosion, ...
Mobile Refueling on the Farm: Best Practices for Remote FieldsFueling farm equipment is often taken for granted—until it becomes a major slowdown. During planting and harvest, tractors, sprayers, and combines work long hours in remote fields, often miles from the main farmyard. Driving equipment back to a stationary fuel tank wastes valuable time, adds wear and tear, and consumes extra fuel. That’s why many operations now rely on mobile refueling setups, bringing fuel directly to the equipment in the field. At Mills Equipment, we’ve helped farmers desig...