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Fuel Management Systems

PIUSI Cube 70MC 240V Diesel Bowser 70L/min (120 Users)

Product Code: AF-FP-59415B

Brand
PIUSI
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Description

Cube 70MC 240V Diesel Bowser 70L/min (120 Users)

  • Up to 120 users
  • Flow Rate: 240V up to 70LPM
  • Memory 255 transactions
  • Accuracy: +/- 0.5%
  • Continuous AC operation
  • IP55 protection
  • Pedestal available
  • Software required
Technical Specifications
Brand PIUSI
Dimensions 39x39x51
Litres 70L
LPM 70 LPM
Voltage 240V
Weight 24 Kg

Australia-Wide Supply & Installation

Delivered & Installed Across Australia

A-FLO Equipment supplies and installs this product to operations across Victoria, Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia and the Northern Territory — including remote and regional sites. Our team manages delivery logistics, site placement and commissioning from our Melbourne VIC and Perth WA locations.

VIC WA QLD NSW SA NT TAS ACT Remote Sites
Head Office

Melbourne VIC

2/127 Cherry Lane
Laverton North VIC 3026

WA Warehouse

Perth WA

27 Harris Rd
Malaga WA 6090

Need technical specifications, dimensions or a custom configuration?

Our team can provide full datasheets, CAD drawings, compliance documentation and a no-obligation quote tailored to your site and application.

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Product Guide

Diesel Fuel Meters — Guide & FAQ

A-FLO Equipment supplies professional diesel fuel meters and digital flow meters for use on diesel transfer pumps, bowsers, self-bunded tanks and mobile refuelling units. Used across transport, mining, agriculture and construction, diesel meters ensure every litre dispensed is accurately measured — supporting cost allocation, compliance records and fuel management.

Transport & Fleet Mining Agriculture Construction Remote Operations

What Is a Diesel Fuel Meter?

A diesel fuel meter (also called a diesel flow meter) is a device that measures the volume of diesel fuel dispensed during a transfer — providing an accurate litre count for billing, cost allocation and compliance records. Digital diesel meters display readings on an LCD or digital readout and can include a resettable batch counter alongside a cumulative totaliser.

Diesel meters are a critical component in any professional fuel dispensing setup — whether mounted on a fixed bowser, integrated into a self-bunded tank system or fitted to a mobile service truck transfer pump.

Common applications for diesel fuel meters

  • Diesel bowsers and fixed depot refuelling bays — accurate dispensing records per vehicle or asset
  • Self-bunded diesel tanks — totaliser metering for tank draw-down tracking and compliance
  • Mobile service trucks and ute-mounted transfer setups — batch metering for field refuelling
  • Mining and remote site refuelling — accurate measurement where fuel is a significant cost item
  • Agricultural machinery refuelling — seasonal usage tracking across multiple assets

What Is a Diesel Bowser?

A diesel bowser is a fuel dispensing unit specifically designed for storing and delivering diesel fuel to vehicles, equipment or machinery. Diesel bowsers can be stationary (fixed on-site) or mobile (mounted on trailers or utility vehicles) — making them a versatile solution for depots, workshops, farms and remote operations.

Commonly used in construction, agriculture, transport, mining and remote operations, diesel bowsers streamline fuel management and reduce operational downtime by keeping fuel readily available where and when it is needed.

Key Components of a Diesel Bowser

Diesel Storage Tank

Self-bunded for spill containment — inner tank within an outer bund to meet AS1940 environmental requirements.

Electric or Manual Pump

240V, 12V or 24V electric transfer pumps, or hand-operated pumps for low-volume or off-grid applications.

Fuel Hose & Nozzle

Diesel-rated hose and automatic shut-off nozzle for safe, controlled dispensing without spillage.

Diesel Flow Meter

Accurate measurement of every litre dispensed — digital display with resettable batch counter and cumulative totaliser.

Fuel Management System

Optional — access control, vehicle identification and digital reporting for fleet accountability and compliance.

Filtration

Fuel filter and water separator protecting engines from contaminated diesel — essential for modern common rail engines.


Frequently Asked Questions

Diesel Fuel Meter FAQ

What types of diesel fuel meters does A-FLO supply?

A-FLO supplies professional diesel fuel meters including oval gear flow meters for high-accuracy diesel measurement, digital diesel meters with resettable totaliser displays, and meters compatible with diesel transfer pumps, bowsers and self-bunded tank systems. All meters are selected for compatibility with diesel fuel and suitability for Australian industrial conditions.

What is the difference between a diesel flow meter and a fuel management system?

A diesel flow meter measures and displays the volume of fuel dispensed at the point of transfer — it is a hardware measurement device. A fuel management system combines a flow meter with access control, user and vehicle identification, and digital reporting to track who dispensed fuel, to which asset and when. For operations needing cost allocation, compliance records or theft prevention, a fuel management system built around the meter is the appropriate solution.

Are A-FLO diesel meters compatible with self-bunded tanks and transfer pumps?

Yes. A-FLO diesel fuel meters are designed to integrate with self-bunded diesel tanks, electric diesel transfer pumps, diesel bowsers and mobile refuelling units. A-FLO can advise on the correct meter for your pump flow rate, connection size and application — call 1300 235 623 for a recommendation.

Do I need a filter on my diesel bowser?

Yes — particularly for modern common rail diesel engines, which are highly sensitive to fuel contamination. A fuel filter and water separator removes particulates and free water before fuel enters the engine — protecting injection systems and preventing costly damage. A-FLO recommends filtration as a standard component on all diesel bowser and transfer setups.

What industries use diesel bowsers and fuel meters?

Diesel bowsers and fuel meters are used across transport and fleet depots, mining and resources, civil construction, agriculture, earthmoving, government fleet operations and remote industrial sites — any operation where diesel is a significant input cost and accurate tracking of consumption by vehicle or asset is required.


Need help selecting the right diesel fuel meter?

A-FLO's team can match the correct meter to your pump, tank and application. Call 1300 235 623, email sales@aflo.com.au or contact us online for a no-obligation recommendation.

Product Guide

Fuel Bowsers — What They Are, How They Work & What to Look For

A-FLO Equipment supplies professional fuel bowsers and diesel dispensing units for Australian industry — used across construction, mining, agriculture, transport and remote industrial operations to store and dispense diesel safely, accurately and efficiently. This guide covers what a fuel bowser is, the types available, how to operate one safely and what maintenance your unit requires.

Construction Mining Agriculture Transport & Fleet Remote Operations Industrial Facilities

Overview

What Is a Fuel Bowser?

A fuel bowser — also known as a fuel dispenser or diesel dispensing unit — is a self-contained system used to store and dispense fuel safely to vehicles, machinery and equipment. Fuel bowsers combine a storage tank, pump, hose, nozzle, flow meter and filtration system into a single unit that can be installed on-site or transported to where it is needed.

They are essential for on-site refuelling wherever a fixed service station is not practical — keeping fuel available where and when it is needed and reducing vehicle downtime caused by travelling off-site to refuel.

Types of Fuel Bowser

Fixed Installation

Stationary Bowser

Permanently installed at a depot, workshop or farm — typically a self-bunded tank with electric pump, digital meter and optional fuel management system for access control and reporting.

Mobile

Trailer or Ute-Mounted Bowser

Road-registered trailer or ute-tray-mounted unit for delivering fuel to remote sites, paddocks or job sites — with 12V or 24V DC pump and self-bunded tank for compliant mobile dispensing.

Compact

Portable Skid Bowser

Skid-mounted portable units for temporary site installations or smaller volume requirements — easy to reposition and suited to smaller construction or agricultural operations.

Key Components of a Professional Fuel Bowser

Self-Bunded Storage Tank

Inner tank within an integral outer bund — captures 110% of tank volume for AS1940 compliant spill containment without a separate bunded compound.

Electric or Engine-Driven Pump

240V AC, 12V or 24V DC electric pumps for depot and mobile use. Diesel engine-driven pumps for high-flow or off-grid applications.

Digital Flow Meter

Accurate measurement of every litre dispensed — resettable batch counter and cumulative totaliser for cost allocation and compliance records.

Fuel-Grade Hose & Nozzle

Diesel-rated hose and automatic shut-off nozzle — rated for fuel service and checked for wear as part of routine maintenance.

Filtration & Water Separator

Removes particulates and free water before fuel reaches the engine — essential for modern common rail diesel systems sensitive to fuel contamination.

Fuel Management System

Optional — access control via RFID card, PIN or key fob with digital reporting for fleet cost allocation, compliance records and theft prevention.

Why Australian operations use fuel bowsers

  • Reduced vehicle downtime — on-site refuelling eliminates travel time to service stations between shifts
  • Accurate cost tracking — digital meters record every litre dispensed for cost allocation per vehicle, asset or project
  • Improved fuel security — self-bunded tanks and optional access control prevent theft and unauthorised dispensing
  • Environmental compliance — AS1940 compliant bunded storage reduces spill risk and meets regulatory requirements
  • Fuel quality protection — on-board filtration prevents contaminated diesel from reaching sensitive modern engines

Safe Operation

How to Operate a Fuel Bowser Safely

Operating a fuel bowser requires strict safety procedures to avoid fuel spills, fire hazards and environmental damage. Always follow your manufacturer's instructions alongside these industry best practices.

01

Read Manufacturer Instructions

Follow all operational and safety guidelines provided with your bowser before first use — including flow rates, pump ratings and maintenance intervals.

02

Wear Appropriate PPE

Use nitrile gloves, eye protection and flame-resistant clothing when handling diesel fuel — particularly during connections, disconnections and tank filling.

03

Earth and Bond the Unit

Always earth and bond the bowser before bulk fuel transfers to prevent static electricity build-up — a potential ignition source in any fuel handling environment.

04

Turn Off All Engines

Ensure all vehicles or machinery being refuelled are switched off before dispensing begins — no exceptions, even for small top-up quantities.

05

Use Certified Fuel-Grade Components

Only use hoses, nozzles and fittings rated for diesel fuel service — check for cracks, swelling or wear before each use and replace immediately if damaged.

06

Monitor the Flow Meter and Avoid Overfilling

Watch the digital flow meter and vehicle tank level during dispensing — overfilling causes spills that create environmental liability and slip hazards.

07

Keep a Class B Fire Extinguisher Accessible

A Class B-rated dry chemical or CO2 fire extinguisher must be immediately accessible at the bowser location — inspect it regularly and check it is within service date.

08

Enforce a No-Ignition-Source Zone

Prohibit smoking, open flames, hot work and mobile phone use within the designated exclusion zone around the fuel bowser — mark it clearly with compliant safety signage.


Maintenance

Fuel Bowser Maintenance Requirements

Routine maintenance extends the service life of your fuel bowser, protects fuel quality and prevents costly operational failures. Build these tasks into your regular maintenance schedule.

Regular Inspections

Check hoses, nozzles, flow meters and seals for cracks, wear or leaks — before first use each day in high-volume operations.

Filter Replacement

Replace fuel filters on schedule — blocked or saturated filters restrict flow, reduce accuracy and allow contaminated fuel to reach engines.

Pump Servicing

Test the pump motor, seals and electrical connections for correct function — address reduced flow rate or abnormal noise immediately.

Tank Cleaning

Periodically clean the fuel tank interior to remove water ingress, diesel bug (microbial contamination) and sediment that degrades fuel quality.

Flow Meter Calibration

Recalibrate the diesel flow meter periodically to maintain dispensing accuracy — important for billing, cost allocation and compliance records.

Bund Inspection

Inspect the outer bund for cracks, collected liquid and sufficient containment capacity — drain any accumulated rainwater to maintain bund effectiveness.

Maintenance tip

  • A well-maintained fuel bowser operates more efficiently, reduces unplanned downtime and protects fuel quality — directly reducing engine maintenance costs caused by contaminated diesel reaching common rail injection systems.

Frequently Asked Questions

Fuel Bowser FAQ

What is the difference between a portable bowser and a self-bunded bowser?

A portable bowser is a compact, lightweight transfer unit for mobile field use — typically 200–1,000 litres on a skid, ute tray or small trailer. A self-bunded bowser has an inner tank contained within an integral outer bund capturing 110% of tank volume — meeting AS1940 requirements for environmentally compliant fuel storage without needing a separate bunded compound. Self-bunded units are required across most Australian states for above-ground diesel storage above regulated thresholds.

Does a fuel bowser need to be self-bunded to be compliant in Australia?

In most Australian states, above-ground diesel storage above certain volume thresholds must be stored in AS1940-compliant bunded containment — either a self-bunded tank or a tank within a separate bunded compound. Self-bunded bowsers satisfy this requirement through their integral outer bund without requiring site-built containment. A-FLO can advise on the correct specification for your state and application — call 1300 235 623.

What pump options are available on A-FLO fuel bowsers?

A-FLO fuel bowsers are available with 240V AC electric pumps for fixed depot installations, 12V and 24V DC pumps for mobile ute-mounted and trailer units, and diesel engine-driven pumps for high-flow or off-grid applications. Flow rates range from small-volume portable units through to high-flow depot bowsers suited to large fleet refuelling operations.

Can I add a fuel management system to a fuel bowser?

Yes. A-FLO can integrate a fuel management system — including RFID card, PIN or key fob access control with digital transaction reporting — into a fuel bowser setup. This enables per-vehicle or per-driver fuel tracking, prevents unauthorised dispensing and produces the compliance records needed for fleet cost allocation and auditing. Talk to A-FLO about the right system for your operation.

Why is filtration important on a diesel bowser?

Modern common rail diesel engines operate at very high injection pressures and are highly sensitive to fuel contamination — even small particulates or free water can cause injector failure. A fuel filter and water separator on the bowser removes contaminants before diesel reaches the vehicle fuel system, protecting engines and preventing costly injection system repairs. A-FLO recommends filtration as standard on all diesel bowser setups.


Need help selecting the right fuel bowser?

Product Guide

Fuel Management Systems — How They Work & What to Look For

A fuel management system is a digital or automated solution that monitors, controls and records fuel usage across vehicles, equipment and storage tanks. Used across mining, construction, transport, agriculture and logistics — where fuel is a significant operational cost — fuel management systems give businesses complete visibility over their fuel assets, reduce waste and theft, and produce the accurate records needed for compliance and fleet reporting.

A-FLO Equipment supplies FLUIDTRACK, FLUIDLINK, PIUSI Bsmart, PIUSI 3000 Supreme and Compac Comfill fuel management systems for Australian operations of every size — from a single depot fuel bay to a multi-site national fleet network.

Mining Transport & Fleet Construction Agriculture Industrial Government Fleet
3 Layers Hardware, access control and digital reporting — integrated
Real-Time Tank levels and dispensing data from anywhere
Scalable Single bay to national multi-site fleet networks
Free On-site audit and no-obligation system design

Overview

What Is a Fuel Management System?

A fuel management system combines hardware and software to automate the tracking and control of fuel dispensing and consumption. Rather than relying on manual fuel logs or paper dockets — which are prone to error, omission and misuse — a fuel management system creates an accurate digital record of every fuel transaction automatically.

The Three Layers of a Fuel Management System

01

Dispensing Hardware

Pumps, digital flow meters, hose reels and dispensing nozzles — the physical infrastructure that delivers fuel accurately and safely at the point of transfer.

02

Access Control

PIN keypads, RFID cards, key fobs or vehicle identification tags — ensuring only authorised users or vehicles can access the fuel supply, with every transaction linked to an identity.

03

Data & Reporting

Cloud-based or local dashboards capturing every transaction — volume, time, date, user and vehicle — for real-time visibility, cost allocation, compliance records and fleet analysis.

What a fuel management system controls and records

  • Who dispensed fuel — by driver identity, RFID card or vehicle tag
  • Which vehicle or asset was refuelled — and how many litres were dispensed
  • When and where the transaction occurred — date, time and site location
  • Current tank levels — with alerts for low fuel, high usage or unauthorised access events
  • Cumulative consumption by vehicle, fleet unit, department or cost centre

How It Works

How Does a Fuel Management System Work?

Fuel management systems integrate hardware and software to automate every stage of the fuel dispensing and recording process — from the moment a user approaches the fuel point to the moment the data appears on a reporting dashboard. Here's how the process works step by step.

01

Access Control — Authorised Users Only

The driver or operator presents their RFID card, PIN, key fob or vehicle ID tag to the dispensing controller. The system verifies authorisation before enabling the pump — preventing anyone without credentials from accessing the fuel supply.

02

Fuel Dispensing — Measured & Recorded

The pump activates and the digital flow meter records the exact volume dispensed — along with the time, date, user identity and vehicle or asset details. Some systems allow a preset volume to be entered before dispensing begins.

03

Data Logging — Every Transaction Captured

Each transaction is stored digitally — locally in the controller's memory or transmitted to a centralised cloud platform or server. Data is retained for compliance auditing, cost reporting and trend analysis.

04

Reporting & Alerts — Real-Time Visibility

Operators access dashboards showing current tank levels, consumption by vehicle or driver, usage trends and discrepancy alerts. Low fuel alerts, unusual usage spikes and unauthorised access attempts trigger notifications before they become operational problems.

05

Integration — Connected to Fleet & Business Systems

Advanced systems connect with GPS fleet tracking, telematics platforms and ERP or accounting systems — enabling fuel cost to be allocated automatically by vehicle, department or project without manual data entry.


Key Benefits

Benefits of a Fuel Management System for Australian Businesses

For Australian businesses where fuel is a significant operational cost — mining, transport, civil construction, agriculture and logistics — a fuel management system delivers measurable impact across cost, compliance and operational efficiency from the first week of operation.

Reduced Fuel Waste & Theft

Access control eliminates unauthorised dispensing. Transaction records instantly identify discrepancies between fuel delivered and fuel dispensed — a common signal of theft or leakage.

Lower Operating Costs

Accurate consumption data by vehicle or asset identifies inefficient units, optimises delivery schedules and reduces the cost of emergency top-up deliveries.

Real-Time Inventory Control

Live tank level monitoring with low-fuel alerts prevents unexpected run-outs — particularly critical for remote mining and construction sites where emergency deliveries are expensive and slow.

Audit-Ready Compliance Records

Detailed transaction logs support AS1940 compliance, environmental reporting and internal auditing — without relying on manually maintained paper records.

Accurate Cost Allocation

Fuel consumption allocated automatically to each vehicle, driver, department or project — eliminating estimation and improving the accuracy of fleet cost reporting and budgeting.

Streamlined Operations

Eliminates manual fuel dockets, paper logs and end-of-month reconciliation — saving administration time and reducing the data entry errors that skew fleet cost reporting.


A-FLO Product Range

Fuel Management Systems Supplied by A-FLO Equipment

A-FLO supplies a complete range of fuel management systems and components for Australian operations — from single-bay depot controllers through to multi-site remote monitoring platforms. Every system is designed to work as a cohesive solution alongside A-FLO's self-bunded diesel tanks, industrial pumps and hose reels.

Flagship

FLUIDTRACK

A-FLO's flagship depot fuel management bowser — real-time dispensing data, driver and vehicle identification, access control and full transaction reporting.

Remote Monitoring

FLUIDLINK

Remote fuel monitoring for multi-site or remote operations — tank levels, dispensing data and alerts accessible via web dashboard from any location.

Access Control

PIUSI Bsmart

Intelligent dispensing controller with RFID card or PIN access — depot and workshop environments requiring per-driver or per-vehicle transaction accountability.

High Volume

PIUSI 3000 Supreme

High-volume controller for large fleet depots and continuous-duty dispensing environments — robust, reliable and suited to high-throughput operations.

Unattended

Compac Comfill

Automated unattended fuelling with full transaction recording — 24/7 fleet refuelling without staff, suited to operations running outside business hours.

Tank Gauging

LEVELTRACK ATG & FLUIDLEV ATG

Automatic tank gauge systems — continuous level monitoring, remote visibility and high-level alarms for proactive stock management and spill prevention.


Frequently Asked Questions

Fuel Management System FAQ

What is the difference between a fuel management system and a fuel meter?

A fuel meter measures and displays the volume dispensed at the point of transfer — it is a single hardware component. A fuel management system uses the meter as one part of a broader solution that also includes access control, user and vehicle identification, real-time reporting and multi-site data aggregation. For operations that need more than a volume reading — cost allocation, compliance records, theft prevention or remote monitoring — a fuel management system is the right solution.

Can a fuel management system work across multiple sites?

Yes. A-FLO's FLUIDLINK remote monitoring platform and compatible fuel management systems are designed for multi-site operations — enabling tank levels, transaction data and consumption reports to be viewed across all locations from a single web dashboard. This is particularly valuable for transport companies, mining contractors and civil operations running fuel across multiple depots or remote sites.

What access control methods do A-FLO fuel management systems support?

A-FLO fuel management systems support RFID card, key fob, PIN keypad and vehicle identification tag access control — with the ability to configure access per driver, vehicle or asset. Every access event is logged against the credential used, creating a complete audit trail of who dispensed fuel and when.

Do fuel management systems help with Australian compliance requirements?

Yes. A-FLO fuel management systems support compliance with AS1940 by providing accurate transaction records for fuel movement documentation, tank level monitoring to support safe-fill and overfill management, and access control to prevent unauthorised dispensing. The digital transaction logs generated are suitable for EPA reporting, internal auditing and fleet cost reporting without relying on manually maintained paper records.

How do I choose the right fuel management system for my operation?

The right system depends on your fleet size, site configuration, access control requirements and reporting depth. PIUSI Bsmart suits small to medium depots needing card or PIN access. FLUIDTRACK suits busy fleet yards needing full transaction accountability. FLUIDLINK suits multi-site operations needing remote visibility. Compac Comfill suits 24/7 unattended fuelling. A-FLO can assess your operation and recommend the right system — call 1300 235 623 for a free consultation.


Need help choosing the right fuel management system?

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