Chip,
Can be done, the original gear box and 4X4 transfer box unit in place. The
MB is expensive here new fan to flywheel from MB and for parts. However the
Musso (Sang Yang) has all but the same engine and is all but as reliable.
Needs the injector pipes held better in braces to stop the lines
Mike,
I said that I found it amazing in the text, that was copied, and
referred to by you. I did not said that you blamed anyone. If it was
your text, then I misunderstood your referral.
I must have misunderstood you, since you now are saying that other
countries defend themselves from US. I
Hello Mike
Keith,
You wrote: He means the other superpower, the Social Forum in Porto
Alegre for
example, and I'm sure the policy changes have more to do with the
World Bank/IMF/WTO than with the US government or other governments.
It's hard to misunderstand his meaning - especially since he
Hakan,
I think you've gotten your Mikes mixed up. I'm Mike Weaver, or Mike the
Elder.
I didn't say any of this. Go back and check the headers.
I responded to your post of a few days ago, and basically agreed with
you that the US suffers from corruption, pollution and lack of transparency.
I
WHICH MIKE?
Henceforth I'm signing my posts as Weaver.
ARGGH.
-Weaver
Keith Addison wrote:
Hello Mike
Keith,
You wrote: He means the other superpower, the Social Forum in Porto
Alegre for
example, and I'm sure the policy changes have more to do with the
World Bank/IMF/WTO than with the
I would like to encourage each and everyone of you to seriously consider
the charity described below.
Now that the holiday season has passed, please look into your heart to
help those in need.
Enron executives in our very own country are living at or just below the
seven-figure salary level.
Mike W,
If you look at my post, it was an answer to
Michael Redler's post, so do not worry. We are
probably all confused by all the Mikes and it
might be good if you sign your posts with
Weaver or Mike W. Maybe you should sign it with The Real Mike. LOL
What you are saying in Swedish is I
Hakan, Weaver and Redler are the same person. He does this to confuse the point and disorient us all!!You want proof? Have you ever seen them together in the same room?fred
On 6/1/06, Hakan Falk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mike W,If you look at my post, it was an answer toMichael Redler's post, so do
The Real Mike,
Sorry, I got two messages from you, one personal
and one through the list. I appreciated you
message, but sent the same answer to both you and
the list. It was not until afterwards, that I saw
the difference and that you in the personal one
try a Swedish sentence, also much
I'm taller and have much better hair than Redler
Fred Finch wrote:
Hakan,
Weaver and Redler are the same person. He does this to confuse the
point and disorient us all!!
You want proof? Have you ever seen them together in the same room?
fred
On 6/1/06, *Hakan Falk* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Isn't KCl what lethal injections are made of??
J
Jason Katie wrote:
i did some reading at wikipedia, and KCl, being part of the final product
in splitting crude glycerine(at least with KOH and HCl), is also used as a
mineral fertilizer, and can be used to cut table salt (theyre about the
That's my fault - I sent two messages - I was worried you were mad at me.
-Weaver
Hakan Falk wrote:
The Real Mike,
Sorry, I got two messages from you, one personal
and one through the list. I appreciated you
message, but sent the same answer to both you and
the list. It was not until
Fred,
If it is the same person, he is going through a
lot of efforts to hide it, even using two
different computers, with different software and
different locations, if you read the message
headers. It is not likely that they are in the
same room, so maybe you are right. If he go
trough
Joe Street wrote:
Isn't KCl what lethal injections are made of??
yes, too much (or too little) potassium and your dead.
J
Jason Katie wrote:
i did some reading at wikipedia, and KCl, being part of the final product
in splitting crude glycerine(at least with KOH and HCl), is also used
Many people compost the glycerine cocktail w/o any treatment. I think
this is best done when KOH is used as the caustic rather than NaOH.
Tom,
I don't believe they're actually composting it. But they think they're
composting it. The methanol fraction is toxic and the soap/oil fraction will
LOL, this is great!On Jun 1, 2006, at 4:26 AM, Mike Weaver wrote:I would like to encourage each and everyone of you to seriously consider the charity described below. Now that the holiday season has passed, please look into your heart to help those in need. Enron executives in our very own
Hakan, He's good...Really good!!fredOn 6/1/06, Michael Redler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...fair enough.Mike R
Hakan Falk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mike W,If you look at my post, it was an answer to Michael Redler's post, so do not worry. We are probably all confused by all the Mikes and it
Many people compost the glycerine cocktail w/o any treatment. I think
this is best done when KOH is used as the caustic rather than NaOH.
Tom,
I don't believe they're actually composting it. But they think
they're composting it.
I also think I've composted it, and I'd definitely know.
The
I can't believe all the selfish things I've been spending money on.
My mortgage, food for my family, health insurance... Now that I know
there is such need in the world, I will strongly reconsider
priorities. The thought of the joy I can bring to Ken Lay when he
finds out he can not only bilk
I knew
the DLC was bad, but it is much worse than I had thought. Wow! Peace, D.
Mindock
http://www.counterpunch.org/carmichael05302006.html
The DLC and Israel
Zionist
Democrats
By MICHAEL CARMICHAEL
Last week the newly elected Prime Minister of Israel, Ehud Olmert,
visited Washington to
Oh, that is just tragic. I'm not only going to withdraw my life
savings, I'm also going to go take a cash advance on my credit cards so
that I can make the most generous donation I am capable of asap --
hell, it's only 23% interest for cash advances.
While I'm at it, I should also donate my
...fair enough.Mike RHakan Falk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Mike W,If you look at my post, it was an answer to Michael Redler's post, so do not worry. We are probably all confused by all the Mikes and it might be good if you sign your posts with "Weaver" or Mike W. Maybe you should sign it with
WHICH MIKE?
Mike R., the one I replied to. Okay, I'll put it on top next time, sorry.
Henceforth I'm signing my posts as Weaver.
ARGGH.
-Weaver
You don't mind hello Weaver? Or is that ARGGH-Weaver? :-) But I don't
think of you as Weaver, I think of you as Mike. Well, whatever, I
shall
Hakan,"I try to write to you in your language and get upset/ridicule my choice of words, instead of try to understand what I want to say in a positive manner."I thought your message was very clearly written. I also think your English is excellent. I fully understoodyour child analogyand my
Also what low sodium table salt is made of I believe.
On 6/1/06, Joe Street [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Isn't KCl what lethal injections are made of??
J
Jason Katie wrote:
i did some reading at wikipedia, and KCl, being part of the final product
in splitting crude glycerine(at least with
Hi Keith;
What about in the case of vermicomposting? Any advice on putting a
little cocktail in there? Will it harm the worms?
Joe
Keith Addison wrote:
Snip
It's not toxic to the soil microlife nor to plants.
snip
It certainly won't harm a compost pile.
Anyway the methanol should
Do you know where I could find more information about emission reductions from soy and rapeseeds? I know that the overall reduction (eg., life cycle assessments) is close to nothing if not greater than regular diesel.
Sarath
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Check with the NBB. Be careful in your analysis not to just look at CO
CO2 and NOx emissions. Biodiesel can produce aldehydes when combustion
processes are not right. Nobody ever talks about this.
Joe
Sarath G wrote:
Do you know where I could find more information about emission
Hi Keith;
What about in the case of vermicomposting? Any advice on putting a
little cocktail in there? Will it harm the worms?
Hi Joe
I was the bad guy here a few years ago after I reported murdering
some red worms that way. :-(
But lots of things will kill worms if you feed it to them in
Weaver
I thought this was the best post I have seen. I LMAO
- Original Message -
From: Mike Weaver
To: biofuel@sustainablelists.org
Sent: Thursday, June 01, 2006 6:26
AM
Subject: [Biofuel] PLEASE HELP
I would like to encourage each and everyone of
Well...,
I think anything can compost/bio-degrade Keith, even pig iron and Exxon
Valdez dropping.
And no doubt the ratio of roughage to glyc cocktail certainly is paramount.
But how many people hear the word compost, dump tonnage into a pile, and
expect miracles without maintenance or
Hello again Todd
Well...,
I think anything can compost/bio-degrade Keith, even pig iron and
Exxon Valdez dropping.
Pig iron will degrade - rust - but I'm not sure it will biodegrade
and it sure won't compost. However iron is an essential
micronutrient required for plant growth. Exxon Valdez
From the local paper.
http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/22918
New Holland goes biodiesel
By Patrick Burns, Intelligencer Journal Staff
Intelligencer Journal
Published: May 24, 2006 8:20 AM EST
LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Farm equipment maker New Holland announced
Tuesday that it is the first U.S.
B20 is a big step I admit, but how about B100? There is a big sign
inside our local biodiesel coop that says B20 is only for suckers or
something to that effect.
I personally won't run anything LESS than B20 in my vehicals (unless
it's really really cold and the B20 is gelling). This is from
The guys in our boiler plant love that diesel smell...takes them back
to their Navy days, I reckon...Full steam ahead!
WD-40 takes me back to childhood, working on stuff with my
Grandfather. I think WD40 should be made into a cologne!
Eau de wd-forty?
http://tinyurl.com/l9kyr
On 5/30/06, Zeke
Not where they're going...
John Beale wrote:
Oh, that is just tragic. I'm not only going to withdraw my life
savings, I'm also going to go take a cash advance on my credit cards so
that I can make the most generous donation I am capable of asap --
hell, it's only 23% interest for cash
On 6/1/06, Zeke Yewdall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
B20 is a big step I admit, but how about B100?
I agree but, one big step is better than lying in the fetal position.
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Stop making fun of my name. My mother was an ARGGH, my father was a
Weaver. Therefore, it's ARGGH-Weaver.
Honestly, what did they teach you in school?
Mike ARGGH-Weaver
Keith Addison wrote:
WHICH MIKE?
Mike R., the one I replied to. Okay, I'll put it on top next time, sorry.
I'm currently in rehab for my glycerine cocktail problem. No one
should go w/o treatment.
If you have a glycerine problem, the only thing you should be concerned
with is getting help *now*!
Appal Energy wrote:
Many people compost the glycerine cocktail w/o any treatment. I think
this is
Hey Redler!! Nice to see you have taken the first step!On 6/1/06, Mike Weaver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm currently in rehab for my glycerine cocktail problem.No oneshould go w/o treatment.
If you have a glycerine problem, the only thing you should be concernedwith is getting help *now*!Appal
My name in Pinkler.
-Mike
Fred Finch wrote:
Hey Redler!! Nice to see you have taken the first step!
On 6/1/06, *Mike Weaver* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm currently in rehab for my glycerine cocktail problem. No one
should go w/o treatment.
If you
I think anything can compost/bio-degrade Keith
I think bio-degrading Keith is a bit harsh. I believe if you just have a word
with him that will suffice.
Appal Energy wrote:
Well...,
I think anything can compost/bio-degrade Keith, even pig iron and Exxon
Valdez dropping.
And no doubt the
Zeke,
You wrote :
I personally won't run anything LESS than B20 in my vehicals (unless
it's really really cold and the B20 is gelling).
Is the petro diesel winterized?
I used B70 all last winter (the 30% petro was winterized) and never had
a problem w. gelling. The car is
Hmmm. The B20 I buy is supposedly winterized, but on one morning,
-5F, it seemed to be slightly gelling. I stuck some diesel 911 in
there, and it was fine. Only that one time the whole winter though.
I tried running B50 or so in 10F weather, and I think I was getting
some gelling (but it also
Yeah, I mean, the guys still alive. Lets not biodegrade him yet.
On 6/1/06, Mike Weaver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think anything can compost/bio-degrade Keith
I think bio-degrading Keith is a bit harsh. I believe if you just have a
word with him that will suffice.
Appal Energy wrote:
Ok Keith;
Thanks for the advice. I didn't realize vermicomposting was on JtF but
I'll check it out. I was planning on doing it indoors due to the cold
winters here. I understand it doesn't smell if you do it right. Now
that I've got the house all to myself, I'm hoping to do something
Methanol make you go blind, I suppose the worms
wouldn't mind.
Ken
--- Joe Street [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Keith;
What about in the case of vermicomposting? Any
advice on putting a
little cocktail in there? Will it harm the worms?
Joe
Keith Addison wrote:
Snip
It's not
Aaaah,
The feedstock. If you buy it, you don't know the feedstock could
be tallow for all you know.
My favorite BD is made from oil that is used to fry chicken. The car
smells like a barbeque. It's not good in winter; it has a high cloud point.
Well, they say it's virgin soy oil usually. I've recently switched to
a different supplier which is using used oil instead of virgin, so I
really don't know what it is...
On 6/1/06, Thomas Kelly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Aaaah,
The feedstock. If you buy it, you don't know the feedstock
yes, but i was listing the USEFUL properties of KCl. as far as comparative
toxcicity goes, you could use table salt for lethal injections as well, only
in slightly larger amounts. LI uses are not applicable to our needs, so i
did not mention it.
sorry to confuse.
jason
- Original Message
I'm reminded of a thing called Brown's gas that i read about.
http://www.eagle-research.com/browngas/whatisbg/whatis.html
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I'd like to try some heat-assisted catalytic reformation of Keith -- if
for no other reason than the irony of a biofuels list owner being made
into biodiesel.
-John
On Jun 1, 2006, at 4:47 PM, Zeke Yewdall wrote:
Yeah, I mean, the guys still alive. Lets not biodegrade him yet.
On
Has anyone heard of such a thing? It says Wood-based biodiesel
production requires the development of new technology. Are they on to
something or are they still working out if this is even possible?
Steve
http://snipurl.com/r8b3
(2006-05-26) Hydro and Norske Skog have agreed to carry out a
i didnt explain my situation as thouroghly as i probably should have.
this is my problem- I live in an apartment, i cannot store large containers
of chemicals because i have no outbuildings, and the management company
would not be happy with me if i brought it in the house.
also, i do not have a
Using wood as feedstock means using either lignin or cellulose, right?
If so, alot of stuff could be made into biodiesel -- grass, weeds,
cardboard, etc... Thermo catalytic cracking is the only thing I can
think of that could do this. Unless they have some fancy microbes
that can digest lignin
Ok Keith;
Thanks for the advice. I didn't realize vermicomposting was on JtF but
I'll check it out. I was planning on doing it indoors due to the cold
winters here.
They're supposed to prefer about 25 deg C (77F) but -10C doesn't seem
to stop them (14F), maybe they get the composting
Hi Jason
i didnt explain my situation as thouroghly as i probably should have.
this is my problem- I live in an apartment, i cannot store large containers
of chemicals because i have no outbuildings, and the management company
would not be happy with me if i brought it in the house.
also, i do
I'd like to try some heat-assisted catalytic reformation of Keith -- if
for no other reason than the irony of a biofuels list owner being made
into biodiesel.
That's not the way it works here John, we always do test batches with
new members first. You express an interest so I take it you're
Hi Zeke and all
Using wood as feedstock means using either lignin or cellulose, right?
If so, alot of stuff could be made into biodiesel -- grass, weeds,
cardboard, etc... Thermo catalytic cracking is the only thing I can
think of that could do this.
Fischer-Tropsch conversion of synthesis gas
Yeah, I mean, the guys still alive. Lets not biodegrade him yet.
It said on the box the stork brought that I'm 100% biodegradeable,
but maybe it just meant the box. The family said the stork was good
though, but they didn't like the trimmings it came with (me).
On 6/1/06, Mike Weaver [EMAIL
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