as the price of 1l vs. price of 1 gal. goes.
But I'm not proposing cutting down virgin forest in Hawaii (very little
left) I'm talking about former sugarcane land along the Hamakua coast
of the Big Island that's been fallow for years and has slowly come into
use for diverse agriculture, (ver
Airspace is controlled. The barnstorming open air biplane days are gone just
like radio emissions without a license. There are places where the winds blow
almost always, such as the continental divide in central Wyoming. They are even
windier at altitude. The gyro field could be marked with str
I think you have to honestly ask what agriculture and/or native flora and
fauna on the islands would be displaced by instituting palm mono-culture for
liquid fuel production.
A safe bet is that many Hawaiians feel that their limitted acreage might be
better served in ways other than usurpin
Hello Keith.
It is good to read that spring is there again in that part of Japan.
Around here on your the opposite part of the wolrd, in the midle of South
America, last weekend we have a tipical start of the autum with rain and
cold winds, temperatures dropping to 13o C but it recover againg d
Yes, I am actually hoping to put a couple of fusion units together since I
can't find a source of dilithium crystals on this remote forgotten outpost.
Would you accept half a pound of pure unobtanium as payment?
:)
Kirk
Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Common sense is actually quite un
Stephan,
$1 per liter is $3.80 per gallon.
Hakan
At 10:22 PM 4/7/2005, you wrote:
Hello Robert, and all
Living in Hawaii, I wish gas was THAT cheap.. we are currently paying
almostt $3 per gallon for #2 diesel, and that's rising by the minute.
So...like the responsible guy I'm trying to be
The US involvement in the fighting in Europe
was not pivotal to the outcome.
Clearly any good student of history knows that US losses in Europe
during WWII were completely drawfed by those of Germany and Russian, but
to claim that US involvement in the fighting in Europe was not pivotal
to
The US involvement in the fighting in Europe
was not pivotal to the outcome.
Clearly any good student of history knows that US losses in Europe
during WWII were completely drawfed by those of Germany and Russian, but
to claim that US involvement in the fighting in Europe was not pivotal
to
Living in Hawaii, I wish gas was THAT cheap.. we are currently paying
almostt $3 per gallon for #2 diesel, and that's rising by the minute.
So...like the responsible guy I'm trying to be I wrote to all the
newspapers about oil palms (which would do well here), about 630 gal of
oil per acre p
Rick Littrell wrote:
Dear Tom,
These are excellent points. In the case of France though the
German army was a bit more of a challenge than the Iraq army, the
French actually wanted us there.
You bring up something interesting, Rick. I would like to
clarify, however, that the German t
Damn, now I won't get that Darwin award I was hoping for... :-)
Thanks very much! A timely warning, I was planning to do it at the
weekend. (Phew!)
I asked the engineer who gave it to me and he wasn't very concerned.
He knew I wanted to cut it up and gave it to me for that purpose.
The bo
Hello Keith.
It is good to read that spring is there again in that part of Japan.
Around here on your the opposite part of the wolrd, in the midle of South
America, last weekend we have a tipical start of the autum with rain and
cold winds, temperatures dropping to 13o C but it recover againg du
This morning, gasoline prices hit $1.00 per liter for regular. I've
never seen it higher than this. Premium fuel, which I have to run in
my truck, is generally 20 cents more per liter, so I DIDN'T fill my
tank this morning. . .
Oh, for ethanol!
robert luis rabello
"The Edge of
Dear Tom,
These are excellent points. In the case of France though the German
army was a bit more of a challenge than the Iraq army, the French
actually wanted us there.
You bring up something interesting, Rick. I would like to clarify,
however, that the German troops we Americans face
Rick,
actually it was not me that wrote the text you responded to below. That
would have been Mike (see http://infoarchive.net/sgroup/BIOFUEL/45661/)
>
>
> Dear Darryl,
>
>In retrospect, it would have been cheaper in both blood and money to
>have kept Sadam under scrutiny and contained him inst
Point of safety
>I'll build another burner unit like the adapted Mother Earth burner
described in the previous post, with a forced-air supply like the first one,
but much smaller. I've got an empty acetylene >tank
>(oxy-acetylene) about 9" diameter, and I'll use that, cut down,
I would
With respect to the US contribution to the European theater consider
that at Stalingrad the German losses were 300,000 and the Russian
400,000 and Stalingrad was a battle that the Russians won! At Kursk the
Germans lost 100,000 killed and wounded and the Russians 250,000 killed
and 600,000
I believe this thing runs like a auto-gyro. Ya get it going in the wind and it
just keeps going & going & going and as long as it's going it generates power.
Now the question is how do ya keep planes from crashing into the power line???
Kirk McLoren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Quite right Mike
to be making my own biodiesel unfortunately. I live in an apartment
complex with no garage. I'm thinking about collecting some WVO and
filtering.
Driving a 24v Cummins turbodiesel (Bosch VP44 and NOT common rail
injection) that has been converted to be more biodiesel friendly (Running
Goo
"free" energy people I have talked with seem to have a large
emotional investment in their paradigm, be it concern about energy
shortage to perceiving themselves as victims of a cabal.
Your points are valid but I don't think the average Lutec fan will
understand you.
Great invention Keith.
Dear Darryl,
In retrospect, it would have been cheaper in both blood and money to
have kept Sadam under scrutiny and contained him instead of invading.
Rick
Darryl wrote:
No, they did not have weapons of mass destruction yet, but they did have the
know how and planned to build them
Thanks for the information. This is really interesting.
Rick
Keith Addison wrote:
Thank you Kirk.
"In the picture to the right, the craft has been
tilted by command, and the wind on this unusually
windy day is turning the rotors, thus both
holding up the craft and generating power which is
These are excellent points. In the case of France though the German
army was a bit more of a challenge than the Iraq army, the French
actually wanted us there. The response we got from the French is what
Bush apparently thought he would get from the Iraqis (sp?).
Unfortunately, he had
I agree with Rick, it looks like a kite with a propeller on it. If
it works then the only energy need would be to get it up there in
the first place, then if the wind is consistant enough it should
stay there.
Having said i imagine that it would require a fairly hefty
tether/power line...and as
Lol Keith!
Sorry, it's a symptom of being a member of such a multi cultural list :-)
Malcolm
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Keith Addison
Sent: 07 April 2005 16:02
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Biofuel] Kerosene
Hi Malcolm and
> Iraq Invasion May Be Remembered as
> Start of the Age of Oil Scarcity
> By Robert Collier
> San Francisco Chronicle
> Sunday 20 March 2005
> http://www.truthout.org/issues_05/032105EA.shtml
>
> Production tumbles in post-Hussein era as
> more countries vie for shrinking supplies
...
> "If it wer
have about 500 litres of it that we were hoping against hope to use
as a winter heating fuel, but that seems to be out (see previous).
First of all, this "Turk"-type burner here:
http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_processor10.html
Journey to Forever 90-litre processor
Scroll down a bit mor
sunny, insects flying everywhere and fruit trees blossoming... And I
finally figured out how to keep our house warm in the winter. LOL!
Well, we get there in the end.
With similar wonderful timing, last year at just this time I finished
building our first MEN burner, the original design:
h
"In the picture to the right, the craft has been
tilted by command, and the wind on this unusually
windy day is turning the rotors, thus both
holding up the craft and generating power which is
transmitted back to the ground. "See Australian
Demonstration Site Photo""
http://www.skywindpower.com
What's all this then Malcolm, an Englishman talking of "kero"??? LOL!
Pond? What pond? The only thing on the other side is the edge of the
world, not as is alleged a whole bunch of folks who talk of kerosene
when they mean paraffin - they all fell off. World not flat, hmphh.
Anyway, from a
>The talk about a large amount of fuel being unburned in a normal gasoline
>engine in good tune is so much blather.
I think you are right
Kirk
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would be very wary of acetone contacting rubber or plastic.
The mode of action sounds unlikely to me. One doesn't get that mu
Quite right Mike
Kirk
Michael Redler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Rick,
I think it's a little like a kite (except, it's a propeller) and the twine is
actually a power line.
How's that Kirk? ...sound right?
Mike
Rick Littrell wrote:
Dear Kirk,
How does this work? A free flying generator wo
Common sense is actually quite uncommon in some circles. Most of the "free"
energy people I have talked with seem to have a large emotional investment in
their paradigm, be it concern about energy shortage to perceiving themselves as
victims of a cabal.
Your points are valid but I don't think
Dear Rick,
What makes you think the U.S. did a good job with the invasion? It was a
major cluster. Sure we beat up a third world army but failed to send the
forces to close the borders. Iraq is the size of France. We invaded France
in 1944 with about 1 million soldiers, Iraq with 120,000. Inf
biodiesel. Mixed 50/50 with biodiesel or normal diesel you can burn it
quite happily in most motors I know of. I would not use it pure, though,
since it is about halfway between petrol and diesel and will not
lubricate very well.
It will be fine for cold starts in winter.
Simon Fowler
MADUR
Hi All,
Quick comment required here. if you've got hungry people in the neighborhood
that's where the starch and sugars should go. Excess capacity that can't be
transported to market, I'm fine with too. Cellulose works well (crop
stubble)in anaerobic processes but first has to go through a hydrol
Hey, I found this while surfing yesterday and thought it was interesting,
ironic, and related to this thread.
Mike
"According to information posted on the Renewable Energy: The Infinite Power >>
of Texas Web server, the Lone Star State now imports $7 billion worth of >>
fossil fuels annually
> From the sound of things the price of petroleum
> products is to cheap and should increase
> to adjust for inflation, world growth and demand.
along with gov't intelligence and military actions
needed to secure world supplies. If only there were
some conciliatory alternatives to all this
about my biodiesel-burnin' Benz. It is not remarkable except that this
group is is run by a retired mechanic, and many of the main poster are older
gentlemen. There is NO politics allowed on the list, and it is not limited
to only diesels. A couple of the listers are biodieselers, and we ge
Thank you Kirk.
"In the picture to the right, the craft has been
tilted by command, and the wind on this unusually
windy day is turning the rotors, thus both
holding up the craft and generating power which is
transmitted back to the ground. "See Australian
Demonstration Site Photo""
htt
Hello,
there are some experiences with kerosene here in Germany (especially with
users in VW diesels by people who live in the vicinity of airports and
have access to kerosene in some way or other...).
Result was that kerosene has not the lubrication that is needed for the
pumps. That might b
A coworker, upon hearing of the Greasel kit, commented that as a boy his
farm had an International tractor that ran on a dual tank system. It started
on gasoline, and when warmed up, there was a valve to switch over to kero.
He said it was hell to pay for the person who forgot to switch back befor
spread with all speed. Hey guys, methinks there's good money to be
made in futures options on water-wings for financiers. - K
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=12039
CorpWatch:
Bringing Business Back Ashore
Buenos Aires issues world's first ban on offshore shell companies
by By Lucy
Hi Chris,
Certainly blend it with bioD - I would tend to have a higher proportion of
bioD than 50/50 though, just to be safe.
On no account use straight kero - in time it will wreck your diesel pump as
it does not have the lubrication properties of dinoD or bioD.
Kero will not work in a petrol
Hello Chris.
Kerosene according to JET A1 is consisting from fractions from both gasoline
and diesel pools. The cetane number of kerosene should be about 38-40 and
has a lower density than diesel oil. My suggestion is that you mix it with
biodiesel , at the most 50/50 for engine fuel. It will make
I have been offered by an aviation industry service mob, up to 1500litres of
free kerosene. Aparently, this comes from some sort of turbine, and when the
fuel tank has a problem, they drain it and are not allowed to reuse it.
They are literally giving it away, I just have to collect it.
Can ke
Thanks for the comments, but...
My longwinded two cents worth.
You can be as longwinded as you like.
Can we now get back to Bio Diesel!?!?
No, in a word. This is not a biodiesel list, it's a biofuels list,
and that's not just a quibble.
When you joined the list you were sent a "Welc
Not an expert in any particular field but common sense and a bit of
logic tells me...
1) The "how-it-works" stuff claims that the *permanent* magnet provides
energy in keeping the object suspended from the roof equating to a
electromagnet holding it up there but expending energy instead. WELL,
h
Hi Rick,
I think it's a little like a kite (except, it's a propeller) and the twine is
actually a power line.
How's that Kirk? ...sound right?
Mike
Rick Littrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Dear Kirk,
How does this work? A free flying generator would simply be carried
along by the wind a
How does this work? A free flying generator would simply be carried
along by the wind and generate no power. If you had an engine to hold
it in place against the wind you would only get back the energy you used
to oppose the wind minus friction loss. You'd have a net loss of
energy. If
I would be very wary of acetone contacting rubber or plastic.
The mode of action sounds unlikely to me. One doesn't get that much of a
mileage improvement with say natural gas compared to gasoline, unless one
exploits the high knock resistance and the capacity for lean burning of
the natural gas;
Kirk,
Do you have any idea of the effects of acetone on a Honda Insight? I believe
the carburetion is slightly different in this car than the average.
While I get good mileage with my Insight, I'd be happy to do better still if
the acetone will do no harm...
Regards,
Dan Volker
-Original Mes
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