good luck, and we hope to hear more. I too fondly remember the Quincy-Lynn
plans.

Steve Spence
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We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors,
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----- Original Message -----
From: "TreeHugger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <biofuel@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2001 9:33 PM
Subject: [biofuel] Unlurking


> Hi,
> I have been lurking on the list.
>
> I enjoy nature. I go camping, hiking, canoeing, kayaking. When I go into
the wilderness, I go there to get away from the noise of civilization.
>
> I drive a 30mpg gas vehicle.
>
> I have worked on my own vehicles since I started driving in 1976 -
motorcycles, cars, trucks, powered boats. This includes general maintenance
to bodywork, engine replacement to engine rebuild, to performance build of a
1973 Opel GT (my favorite)
>
> I have worked for a former independent power producer (IPP) - Kenetech
(they were a very large player in the windpower business) - on the thermal
operations side of the business - natural gas and dual fuel (natural
gas/fuel oil) cogeneration plants and wood-burning power plants ranging from
16MW to 48MW in size. I worked in plant operations, mechanical maintenance
and computer maintenance. I could assist in the electrical maintenance if
needed. (As an aside, we had two UPS power supplies at the main plant I
worked in. One was a 24VDC system with 4 deep cycle 6V flooded cells. The
other was a 120 VDC system with 20 deep cycle 6V flooded cells supplying an
inverter to supply AC power for emergency loads.)
>
> I am a proponent of nuclear power as the safest form of power generation -
see The Health Hazards of Not Going Nuclear by Petr Beckman
>
> Having said all that.
>
> I bought the Tri-Magnum plans from Quincy-Lynn Enterprises (now Robert Q.
Riley Enterprises - http://www.rqriley.com) shortly after it appeared in
Mechanix Illustrated in Feb 1983. I never did get around to building it, but
I did hold on to the plans. I also bought the plans for the diesel powered
Centurion (same source). And again, I haven't built it.
>
> This past April as gas prices started to climb, and I had a 50-mile
commute for my current project, I started seriously investigating the
alternatives.
>
> I started with electrics and hybrids. I was impressed at the advances in
the technologies since the mid-80's. The batteries were still lead-acid and
still the heaviest part of the conversion. The motors were now built for
this application, not surplus aviation generators and there were commercial
controllers built for this. (I wouldn't have to build my own from someone
else's schematics and try to figure out why I keep getting those strange
surges on the downhill runs.)
>
> Then I saw that NESEA was having their 13th annual Tour de Sol starting
here in Connecticut in May. I immediately put that on my calendar as a
must-see event for my homework list.
>
> I then started doing homework on alternative fuels, having worked with
wood-burning power plants and knowing of agriwaste power plants and trash-
and tire-to-energy plants. I came across the veggie van. Ok, yeah. A couple
of hippies in their van found a way to burn vegetable oil in a diesel. How
much of the wacky weed were they consuming along the way to keep from
worrying about how far they were not going and how many times had they seen
the Grateful Dead live?
>
> I read further on the web site and got hooked a bit more. I read about
Rudolf and how he had created the diesel engine to run on all the oils that
were more plentiful than that gasoline that took a lot of refining to make.
I saw the university studies. I saw the government uses. I saw the
commercial ventures. I saw the grass roots.
>
> I contacted my local state representative (a member of the Transportation
committee) to see what was being done on the state level.
>    "What's biodiesel?" "Alternative fuel" is considered to be
ethanol/gasoline mix.
>    Home-built or home-converted electric vehicles are covered under the
"composite vehicle" inspection code with sane rules that are fairly easy to
meet with the technology available and with smart safety standards that will
keep the aircraft generator with the 6 boat batteries and a lawn mower
engine running a car alternator off the road.
>
> So, my visit to the Tour de Sol and talks with the NBB reps. and with the
U of Wis. people in their HEV "Alumnium Cow" runninng biodiesel through
their diesel genset convinced me that I was going to have a small diesel
powered vehicle in my hands by the time prices started climbing higher next
year. With the commercial ventures starting around the US, it's going to be
available at the pump within five to ten years, I'd bet. I have From the
Fryer to the Fuel Tank. I have Convert It, Michael Brown. I have my Riley
plans, my lifetime of learning,  my desire and best of all, folks like those
on this list and others who are helpful an diverse in their opinions.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
> Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
> http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
> Please do NOT send "unsubscribe" messages to the list address.
> To unsubscribe, send an email to:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
>
>
>


Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
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