--- In biofuel@yahoogroups.com, "kirk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There is an out of print book "Novel Drilling Technoques" that in
the second
> edition talks about cutting sandstone at several meters per second
with
> liquid pressures of that magnitude. Granite I think was 7cm per
second if
Steve Spence I read one of your topics on how to make ethanol from sawdust
please contact me I need more details.
- Original Message -
From: Steve Spence
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL
PROTECTED] ; Biodiesel - Egroups ; Biofuel - Egroups ;
Dear Hakan
Any real petrol head with reasonable long term international knowledge of
automotive or motorcycle history can tell you your statement that ...
"The good thing is that the advanced vehicle technologies...are not based in US
any longer." ...is not true.
Apologies to those from the USA
I think it would be safe for all of us to agree
that it was not "Nazi Germany was Democratic"
but that "Nazi Germany came into being in a democratic system"?
I think you and Thor both have some valid points.
I don't, however, agree with you on your comparison to Today's Us president
and
the fi
I believe that they dont take a bunch of extra fuel around just in case they
need to get to any object in the earths orbit.
Its not like they can just fill up at a station along the way.
They are at different altitudes and different locations. If they arent
going to take a jet pack for emergenc
Thanks for the help! I live in the foothills Nevada City to be exact. Hope
to get my Ford F250 runnin on bio-diesel soon.
Ken
- Original Message -
From: "girl mark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, February 05, 2003 11:12 AM
Subject: Re: [biofuel] Methanol CA?
> well that dep
Speaking of this is there a ranking on the easiness of collecting the crop?
jatropha sounds nice for arid areas, and looks highly productive, but can
you get to the oil source easily?
I don't want to spend 10 times as much time collecting the 'fruit of the
labor'
Atleast coconuts are easy to lo
Hi,
Thanks, for the feedback.
My goal in getting into working with biodiesel is to produce enough for myself
as well as potentially selling it on a small scale. Continous processing
looked very attractive because I would not have to store all that much product
at any one time. I am not quite r
Hydrogen Cars Remain Decades in the Future Under New Budget
By DANNY HAKIM (NYT)
The Bush administration plan to spur development of hydrogen cars does not
envision mass production until 2020.
ETROIT, Feb. 4 - The Bush administration plan to spur development of
hydrogen cars does not envision mas
Hydrogen Cars Remain Decades in the Future Under New Budget
By DANNY HAKIM (NYT)
The Bush administration plan to spur development of hydrogen cars does not
envision mass production until 2020.
ETROIT, Feb. 4 - The Bush administration plan to spur development of
hydrogen cars does not envision mas
VW to offer 2.0-liter, four-cylinder diesel in
Passat this year
By RALPH KISIEL | Automotive News
Volkswagen of America Inc. will offer a diesel
engine in its Passat sedan this year.
The automaker
A NASA spokesperson was asked about that in an interview, and said
that since Columbia was not on a mission to dock with the Space
Station, it had been launched without the hardware necessary to make
such a connection.
He also openly speculated that that would not happen again!
Lisa
Messa
Biofuels has many powerful
enemies, who'd no doubt be most delighted if we started killing
ourselves (and others), they'd kick us with it for years to come.
++
If biofuel becomes a big enough threat I am sure they will arrange some
demonstrations to encourage laws to outlaw hom
On Wednesday, February 5, 2003, at 11:19 AM, girl mark wrote:
> the ethanol bulk buy is Ken Provost's project (listmember here as well
> as
> at the Burnveggies list...). It's an interesting one but be aware that
> ethanol is not super useful for complete beginners- ethanol is much
> harder
>
the ethanol bulk buy is Ken Provost's project (listmember here as well as
at the Burnveggies list...). It's an interesting one but be aware that
ethanol is not super useful for complete beginners- ethanol is much harder
to work predictably with than methanol. I was able to get 100% ethanol from
well that depends on where you are in california. look in the phone book
under racing (or automotive-racing and performance, amazing how many people
miss that one when they look at racetracks and only find the horse racing
variety!). ask at your local hot rod shops or race engine builders. Look
Ken,
Anywhere in particular in CA?
How much Methanol are you looking for?
I'm in San Diego, I buy 5-35gal quantities from VP Racing fuels through
local performance shops. I wish I had the room to work with larger amounts,
I'd buy in bulk direct from VP in LA, it's much cheaper.
There's a group in
Hi Kirk
>There is an out of print book "Novel Drilling Technoques" that in the second
>edition talks about cutting sandstone at several meters per second with
>liquid pressures of that magnitude. Granite I think was 7cm per second if
>memory serves.
>Obscure technology.
>
>Anyway, you can lose a
Can anyone point me to a source for Methanol in sunny California???
Thanks,
Ken
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There is an out of print book "Novel Drilling Technoques" that in the second
edition talks about cutting sandstone at several meters per second with
liquid pressures of that magnitude. Granite I think was 7cm per second if
memory serves.
Obscure technology.
Anyway, you can lose a lot more than ju
Rui,
Continuous process is not all that proponents crack it up to be.
You can make every bit as good a product and in some instances
better with the batch system, ranging from gallon jugs to 3,000
gallon reactors.
Or you could fire up your multi-million dollar hp reactor and
keep an engineer and
Hi Rui
>Hi,
>
>I am a gearhead first and foremost. A friend of mine has a VW Jetta diesel
>(TDI) and he introduced me to Biodiesel. I do not currently own a diesel
>vehicle but I am looking to convert my Toyota LandCruiser to diesel, plus I
>want to look at the potential of using a biofuel for h
>
> Has anyone looked at the pressures produced by
>direct injection fuel pumps? The Dodge/Cummins direct injection pump puts out
>24000 psi... Hmmm
by the way , those kinds of pressures are very dangerous for reasons beyond
just the capacity of the container/component design.
I know some
hello Rui,
batch processes of all kinds work very very well. Unless you're about to
jump right into massive scale commercial production, you don't need to
worry about continuous process in order to efficiently make good biodiesel.
there are hundreds of ways to build a biodiesel processor for
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