Diesel Generator Fuel Testing

ASTM D975 diesel fuel

Diesel Fuel Lab provides certified ASTM D975 testing — laboratory analysis of diesel fuel against the Standard Specification for Diesel Fuel Oils, the foundational quality standard referenced by NFPA 110, EPA regulations, DOT requirements, and virtually every regulatory framework governing diesel fuel in the United States. Our testing is conducted through Sterling Analytical (sterlinganalytical.com), a laboratory with over 65 years of petroleum fuel analysis experience, delivering ASTM-certified results with fast turnaround and defensible Certificate of Analysis documentation.

Before we go any further: if you arrived at this page wondering what ASTM D975 testing actually is and whether you need it, the most important thing to understand is that ASTM D975 is not a single test. This is the single most common source of confusion about diesel fuel compliance, and clearing it up will save you time, money, and a lot of unnecessary frustration.

What ASTM D975 Actually Is: A Specification, Not a Test

ASTM D975 — officially titled Standard Specification for Diesel Fuel Oils, current edition D975-24 approved May 2024 — is a specification document published by ASTM International that does three things:

  1. Defines seven grades of diesel fuel by composition and intended application
  2. Establishes quality limits (pass/fail thresholds) for each grade across 13+ measurable properties
  3. References the individual ASTM test methods that must be used to measure each property
When a laboratory performs “ASTM D975 testing,” it is running some or all of those 13+ individual test methods and comparing each result to the specification’s published limits for the specific grade being tested. ASTM D975 is the rulebook; the individual test methods (D2709 for water and sediment, D93 for flash point, D6304 for Karl Fischer moisture, etc.) are the actual measurements.

This distinction matters practically for two reasons:

The Seven ASTM D975 Diesel Fuel Grades Explained

ASTM D975-24 classifies diesel fuel into seven grades, organized by sulfur content (S15, S500, S5000) and base grade (No. 1-D, No. 2-D, or No. 4-D):

Grade

Sulfur Max

Description

Primary Use

No. 1-D S15

15 ppm

Light, highly volatile distillate, ultra-low sulfur

Cold weather, high-altitude, high-speed diesel engines

No. 1-D S500

500 ppm

Light distillate, low-sulfur

Cold weather applications, off-road

No. 1-D S5000

5,000 ppm

Light distillate, regular sulfur

Off-road, older equipment

No. 2-D S15

15 ppm

General-purpose middle distillate, ultra-low sulfur

Standard on-road diesel, standby generators

No. 2-D S500

500 ppm

General-purpose, low-sulfur

Off-road equipment

No. 2-D S5000

5,000 ppm

General-purpose, regular sulfur

Industrial, older off-road equipment

No. 4-D

Varies

Heavy distillate or blend with residual oil

Low- and medium-speed stationary engines

For standby generators and most stored fuel applications, the relevant grade is No. 2-D S15 — standard Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel (ULSD), the fuel available at virtually every retail and commercial diesel pump in the United States. When you or your fuel supplier reference “ASTM D975 compliance” for generator fuel, this is almost certainly the grade in question. It is also the grade incorporated into federal law under 40 CFR § 1090.95 for highway diesel fuel.

One critical note on ULSD and storage: the switch to ultra-low sulfur diesel from higher-sulfur formulations, completed for highway diesel in 2006, introduced a significant change in fuel storage behavior. ULSD oxidizes faster in storage than its predecessors because the hydrotreating process that removes sulfur also removes natural antioxidant compounds present in crude-derived fuel. This is part of why stored ULSD in standby generator tanks degrades more rapidly than older generation fuels did, and why the 12-month annual testing interval in NFPA 110 is important to honor rather than stretch.

The 13 Core ASTM D975 Test Parameters: What Each One Measures

The current ASTM D975-24 specification establishes limits for the following properties, each measured using a specific referenced ASTM test method:

Parameters That Commonly Fail in Stored Fuel

(Test these annually — they deteriorate during storage)

Parameters That Should Be Tested at Baseline (Rarely Change During Storage)

ASTM D975 and NFPA 110: The Key Relationship

NFPA 110 Section 8.3.7 states: “A fuel quality test shall be performed at least annually using appropriate ASTM standards.”

ASTM D975 is the standard that NFPA 110 references for diesel generator fuel compliance — but as discussed above, ASTM D975’s scope is fresh fuel at delivery, not long-term stored fuel. This creates a compliance interpretation gap that facility managers consistently encounter:

At Diesel Fuel Lab, we offer:

What ASTM D975 Testing Does NOT Tell You

Being clear about ASTM D975’s limitations is as important as knowing what it covers:

Who Needs ASTM D975 Testing

How to Submit a Sample for ASTM D975 Testing

  1. Select your testing package — Core Compliance, Advanced Stored Fuel, or Full D975 Specification
  2. Receive your sample kit — clean sample container and return packaging
  3. Collect your sample from the bottom third of the storage tank (where water and sediment accumulate)
  4. Ship your sample via the prepaid return label included in your kit
  5. Receive your Certificate of Analysis with all tested parameters, measured values, ASTM method references, and pass/fail designations

Standard turnaround: 3–5 business days from lab receipt. Rush 24–48 hour turnaround available.

Our testing is conducted through Sterling Analytical, established 1957, West Springfield, Massachusetts.

Request a Quote

Ready to verify ASTM D975 compliance or evaluate the condition of stored diesel fuel?

Submit your fuel type, storage conditions, tank size, and testing requirements to receive a tailored quote and recommended testing package. Whether you need a Core ASTM D975 compliance panel, an Advanced Stored Fuel evaluation, or a complete ASTM D975 specification analysis, our laboratory team will recommend the most appropriate testing approach for your application.

Frequently Asked Questions

ASTM D975 is the Standard Specification for Diesel Fuel Oils, published by ASTM International. It defines seven grades of diesel fuel and establishes quality limits across 13+ parameters, measured by specific ASTM test methods. It is not a single test — it is a specification that references multiple tests.
NFPA 110 Section 8.3.7 requires annual fuel quality testing using appropriate ASTM standards, and references ASTM D975 for diesel. However, D975 alone doesn't cover all the storage-specific failure modes most likely to cause generator startup failure. A complete standby generator fuel testing program should include D975-referenced parameters plus storage-specific tests for microbial growth and oxidation stability.
For virtually all standby generators in the U.S. using commercial diesel fuel, the applicable grade is No. 2-D S15 (Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel, maximum 15 ppm sulfur). This is the standard highway diesel fuel available from commercial suppliers.
Only at the time of delivery. ASTM D975 specifies fuel properties at the time and place of delivery. Once fuel is in your storage tank, degradation begins — condensation, oxidation, microbial growth — and the delivery COA no longer reflects current fuel condition. Annual testing of stored fuel is required to maintain compliance.
Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel was introduced for highway use in 2006. The deep hydrotreating that removes sulfur also removes natural antioxidant compounds, making ULSD oxidize faster in storage than older high-sulfur formulations. This is why ULSD stored in standby generator tanks requires more attention to oxidation stability than older fuel did.