On fuel alcohol: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (inserted link)
(Redirected page to Fuel Alcohol)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Just a note to suggest an open mind on using alcohol as a decentralized
#REDIRECT [[Fuel Alcohol]]
fuel source  -  alcohol, as distinguished from ethanol which is denatured
or adulterated alcohol.
 
It is legal to make alcohol for fuel - illegal to make it for beverages.
An engineering diagram is available on the web for building a distillation unit.
Plans are $30.  Materials are $600.  The unit was designed about 30 years ago
and can be found in assembled form on Ebay & Craigs list for less than the
cost of materials.  You simply Google the model number  <charles 803>
to find one.  The equipment could easily be modified slightly and added to
the open source inventory.
 
I've spent the last six years trying to develop gaseous fuels into a viable, decentralized
fuel source.  These include biogas, process gas and Magnegas.  While useful
for many stationary applications, I've found them to be impractical for transportation
because of their low power density.  The cost of increasing the power density -
compressing them or cryogenically condensing them, makes them impractical
in my view.
 
In reviewing the possibilities of liquid fuels, I learned that my bad impressions
of ethanol were the result of oil company propaganda - especially the "food vs fuel"
issue.  I learned this from Permaculture designer David Blume who wrote the
book, [http://www.permaculture.com/ "Alcohol can be a gas"]. Here's a link to his YouTube interview if you
wish to pursue this:
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jew3ah24Zj4
 
 
I'm writing to you specifically because there are no commercial engines
designed to exploit the high octane ratings of alcohol.  There are custom-designed
units used in racing.  Saab makes a 2-liter roadster that puts out 300 hp. (150 hp/liter)
Any ordinary IC engine will run on alcohol but the low  gasoline compression ratio
penalizes its fuel economy.  Increase its compression ratio and it approaches
diesel in fuel economy.
 
The Charles 803 allows you to make consistently pure E85 at the rate of 7.5 gallons
per hour from sour milk, cattail rhizomes, fruit processing waste - any source
of sugar or starch.  Fuel production is now included in David Blume's  permaculture garden designs.
 
==See Also==
[http://permaculture.org.au/2010/06/02/biofuels-and-confirmation-bias/ Biofuels and Confirmation Bias]
 
 
[[Category:Biofuel]]

Latest revision as of 18:09, 12 April 2011

Redirect to: