Robust fuels: Difference between revisions

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Internal combustion engines are designed for a fuel with a specific consistency. The fuel is made from raw materials that have various consistencies so they have to be refined. The refinement is complex and thus expensive, which leads to it being centralized. Gasoline is refined from crude oil.
Internal combustion engines are designed for a fuel with a specific consistency. The fuel is made from raw materials that have various consistencies so they have to be refined. The refinement is complex and thus expensive, which leads to it being centralized. Gasoline is refined from crude oil.
[[Category:Energy]]
[[Category:Biofuels]]


'''Proposed for deletion. Nothing links here and the point is made on various pages about biofuels/ Babington burner etc.'''
'''Proposed for deletion. Nothing links here and the point is made on various pages about biofuels/ Babington burner etc.'''
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The topic is very similar page: http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Pure_plant_oil_as_fuel - both could be merged. -Rasmus
The topic is very similar page: http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Pure_plant_oil_as_fuel - both could be merged. -Rasmus
[[Category:Energy]]
[[Category:Biofuel]]

Revision as of 14:08, 25 August 2016

Internal combustion engines are designed for a fuel with a specific consistency. The fuel is made from raw materials that have various consistencies so they have to be refined. The refinement is complex and thus expensive, which leads to it being centralized. Gasoline is refined from crude oil.

Proposed for deletion. Nothing links here and the point is made on various pages about biofuels/ Babington burner etc.

Is there a requirement that something must link? Can that not happen later? -Marcin

The topic is very similar page: http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Pure_plant_oil_as_fuel - both could be merged. -Rasmus