Thanks for such a practical idea; I hadn't thought of displacing
the air in the tank itself.
For lack of a MIG welder I could just exhaust my 1984 turbodiesel
into the tank to displace the air, couldn't I? It reminds me of the
old technique for ridding one's yard of gophers...
Not being a
I have a related question.
Can anyone think of something that would float on the surface of
the WVO without melting?
I would like to reduce oxidation and increase storage life by
covering the surface area of WVO stored in a large tank with a lot
of floating objects that won't melt in the
It ought to take months for your oil to go rancid, considering it lasts a
week or so exposed to air at high temperatures.
Displace air with carbon dioxide - when the tank (smaller is better) is just
about full put the nozzle of a MIG gun in and press the trigger - 18 litres/
minute should go in
Nitrogen pack it.
- Original Message -
From: maudessen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2004 8:36 PM
Subject: [biofuel] Re: proper storage of used cooking oil to make it last
longest possible
I have a related question.
Can anyone think of
Maud wrote.
Can anyone think of something that would float on the surface of
the WVO without melting?
InterestingI have heard of ping pong balls being used to conserve warmth
in heated swimming pools.
I would like to reduce oxidation and increase storage life by
covering the surface