I like the Biofuels list BECAUSE it has comments from all
sides of the
political spectrum. I am an Australian, and consider that of late, the
Americans have become bullies: if you do not do as we say, we have the power
to force you. Often this power is not the Armament might, but the voices fr
At 04:50 AM 2/25/04 +0900, Keith wrote:
>> Politicians, right and left, lie. That's hardly news, and
>>hardly likely to
>>change unless conditions render them irrelevant. That's why I'm here on
>>this list, to glean information which might help further that goal. It's
>>becoming quite evi
Biodiesel naturally absorbs some water, hence the
cloudiness after a wash.
The wash test recommended is simply to determine whether your fuel is of
reasonable enough standard as to put in a tank. You don't do that until the
fuel has clarified. That can be done either with time and gravity or hea
Last thing in the world I need Bryan, is pointers from
people such as
yourself who advocate doing less than what is possible.
If you want to lay down like a doormat, great. Knock yourself out. Go ahead
and waste what little political capital you have and don't vote. Seal the
tomb with a little b
Comprehensive Homebrew Biodiesel Class
March 13, 2004
At Biofuel Station, Laytonville, CA
instructor: Maria "Mark" Alovert
Biodiesel is a renewable fuel made from any plant oil and other fats.
It can be used in any diesel engine without modifications, and can be made
easily in your backya
In a message dated 2/23/04 1:24:09 PM Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
> In a message dated 2/23/2004 7:30:44 AM Central Standard Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> such as Union Carbide's metamorphosis into Dow
> Chemicals after its corporate terrorism in Bhopal (1984).
> As
Good Intelligence; Wrong Conclusions
We are at an epochal moment in history. Some at the top know of the
breathtaking earth changes coming, but are reacting in fear to protect
their own rather than see that the lesson to be learned is that we are all
part of the same ecosystem. We must
Hi Robert
>Keith Addison wrote:
>
> >
> > He knew what the basic wealth is, very wise. You'd think of course an
> > agricultural research scientist would know that, but so many don't,
> > even today. Yields! Efficiency!
>
>Having grown up in the era of the "green revolution", it's been very
>
Walt Patrick wrote:
>It's my
>hope that opening up new energy sources at the grass roots level (which I
>thought was the point behind this list)
One of them, and it's been and continues to be most successful.
>will open up new options for
>change. That's why we're working on building a micro
Hello Walt
>At 12:36 AM 2/24/04 +, you wrote:
> >--- In biofuel@yahoogroups.com, Walt Patrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >"Someone lacking the stones to even sign his post."
> >
> >
> >Please don't swagger around like some testosterone saturated teenager
> >looking for trouble. Loo
Alan,
The soot layer is more likely to be on the ground, combined with large
areas of misc. constructions and clearance of land mass. This would give a
larger emission factor of the ground and a warming of the lower atmosphere.
Maybe the global waring have a contribution from this also. The u
At 02:33 AM 2/24/04 -0500, Allan wrote:
>I believe you mis-spelled "Southerners". Or perhaps "Confederates".
Nope. Southron was and remains the term for a person who supported the
Confederate States of America, as opposed to someone who just happened to
live in the southeast.
>And d
In a message dated 2/24/2004 4:00:56 AM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
. At
this point any of the "alternative" party candidates are merely
spoilers, and votes for any of them are effectively votes for Bush.
If your only goal it to defeat Mr. Bush, you vote for the lesser of
Keith Addison wrote:
>
> He knew what the basic wealth is, very wise. You'd think of course an
> agricultural research scientist would know that, but so many don't,
> even today. Yields! Efficiency!
Having grown up in the era of the "green revolution", it's been very
hard to accept that "m
Hi again,
Another dumb question. Is this heating a needed step and if it is how long
should it be heated for?
There's no need to heat the finished fuel to this high of a temp to dry it.
Approximately 120*F (~46*C) is more than sufficient to get any microscopic
water to settle out before putt
esbuck wrote:
>It is my understanding that most of the foods we eat are genetically
>modified, but the mods. were made millenia ago. Corn (maise) cannot
>reproduce without
>human help, since the kernels, seeds, stick to the cob. Obviously, corn is
>genetically different than wild maise. simil
>Why heat it ?
>
>Met vriendelijke groeten,
>Pieter Koole
>Netherlands
Right Peter - no need, unless you're in a hurry. Letting it settle
until it's clear is fine.
110 deg C (230 F) is at any rate completely unnecessary, waste of
energy. Some people do 60 deg C (140 F), but I agree with Todd:
Hey, esbuck, I didn't write that either! Oh well, never
mind, in fact
I'd wanted to do a piece on Bhopal for Journey to Forever's FYI
section, but I didn't get that far, and we've stopped updating that
section now, too much else on our plates. There's some good stuff
there though:
http://jour
At 12:36 AM 2/24/04 +, you wrote:
>--- In biofuel@yahoogroups.com, Walt Patrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>"Someone lacking the stones to even sign his post."
>
>
>Please don't swagger around like some testosterone saturated teenager
>looking for trouble. Look at the email addre
Todd,
I'm speaking from historical and empirical evidence when I say that it
doesn't matter which "party" is in power, nor does it make a whit who
you vote for. The illusion of a "two party system" it is just that.
While each party pushes its own pet programs, history has shown time and
time
Why heat it ?
Met vriendelijke groeten,
Pieter Koole
Netherlands
The information contained in this message (including attachments) is
confidential, and is intended for the addressee(s)
only. If you have received this message in error please delete it and
notify the originator immediately. The
See also:
http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/23888/story.htm
Energy sector generous to likely House energy chair
http://tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/9996
The Power Player
Sheryl Fred is an investigative reporter for the Center for
Responsive Politics and its online newsletter,
I believe Islam came in somewhere between the old
testament and the new
testament. I read somewhere that Islam derived its teachings from the old
testament with Mohamed proclaiming himself as God's one and only prophet
thus the similarities of Islam with Judaism e.g. Passover and Ramadan.
=>
Incidentally, I, and I assume many others who might more or less be
fans of some resurgence of the diet, am not an unrestricted fan of the
diet, as a diet for life.
I just sort of like some of it, and I like some of the idea of it
bringing about some long-overdue change in overall food total
co
the headline story on drudge today? about how the saudi
oilfields
have peaked! scary stuff. i wonder if thats what this war is actually
about. also check out the files section of
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/schoolbusconversionuts
for a homemade biofuel plant. many members there are running v
--- In biofuel@yahoogroups.com, Walt Patrick <[EMAIL
PROTECTED]> wrote:
"Someone lacking the stones to even sign his post."
Please don't swagger around like some testosterone saturated teenager
looking for trouble. Look at the email address if you want to see my
name.
Biofuel at
I wouldnt really call Bush hyper-religious. If he is a true Christian, he is
an aweful one and must have his own 'special' bible. I can even guess who
wrote his. Take care. Mike M. www.cpnc.info
-
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard - Read only the mail you
There's no need to heat the finished fuel to this high of
a temp to dry it.
Approximately 120*F (~46*C) is more than sufficient to get any microscopic
water to settle out before putting the fuel in the tank.
The simplest home test for fuel acceptability is to put equal parts fuel and
water in a
hi
what you did is right your biodiesel will be of good
quality.. butb4 using the biodiesel, heat it for 110
degree celsius and thn use it.-vidhya
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-
Hi all,
I just made my second large batch of Biodiesel. (10
gallon) I have made
As I've said earlier, I just bought a 1984 VW Vanagon.
I'm planning
on running it on B100 and SVO in a two tank system. (I'm leaning
towards Greasel). My question is: does anybody who knows a lot about
VWs know if I will have to replace the seals on my engine? (i.e. are
they rubber or someth
Hi biofuel forum,
I am an artist in New York looking to embark on a biofuel project. This project
involves making biodiesel and fueling a road trip(s) to various cities in the
US.
I am very interested in collaborations and exchange in the process of making
work. I would be very interested in
--- In biofuel@yahoogroups.com, Keith Addison <[EMAIL
PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The big concern, according to Becker, is that the Bush
administration
> would regulate the fuel economy of light trucks by dividing them
into
> weight or size classes instead of using fleet-wide efficiency
> targets.
If ADM sells less as high carb. food, because people are on the Atkins diet,
they will sell more chicken feed, so they win either way.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Hi all,
I just made my second large batch of Biodiesel. (10 gallon) I have made 8
different blender batches, the first 3 I screwed up the amount of lye. (the
scale was way off) The next 5 came out great, (I think) I have gotten great
seperation on every good batch that I have made. 2 ver
Walt Patrick wrote:
> About 140 years ago, a group of federalists took over the government
> and
> waged a war of conquest which destroyed more than a million lives thereby
> establishing the principal of rule by conquest as the foundation for the
> federal government. If they could kil
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In a message dated 2/23/2004 12:07:36 PM Central Standard Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > Perhaps. But don't forget that the particulates in question are soot,
> > which tends to absorb heat rather than reflecting it.
> That's the point. The soot absorbs heat
Bryan,
> As you point out Todd, I was the first to frame this discussion in the
> "us-them democrat-republican" thing, but it was merely an anticipatory
> post
Yup. Pretty sad that. Thankfully life in general isn't orchestrated the same
way you would manipulate a conversation. If it were to mode
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