If you watched The Colony season 1 from the Discovery Channel you will remember that they powered a small engine from the fumes of heated wood. Is it possible? what’s your opinion?
In this video, John the scientist explains how he is going to create a gassifier. skip to 7:39 if you like.
PART ONE
PART TWO
This is the video of their first attempt. Not enough heat and the container is too large:
I have not found the video of the working gasifier yet, it is on youtube somewhere, I will find and post it here right away.
COMMENTS:
Senior Member |
You can’t call John C. a liar. He has too much integrity.
In John C.’s blog, he writes: "I remember how absolutely amazed I was that we were actually making electricity out of wood fumes.. .. I hope the sense of ‘can that really be working ..?!?!’ came through. For those who are wondering.. we got about 3 hours of generation from every charge of wood. .. which was sufficient to top off our batteries. One thing I really loved about the show was that everything they showed that worked.. actually worked.. if it didn’t work.. they’d show that it didn’t work.. That was really important to me." John also talks about the gassifier in a podcast. I had kind of wondered if he had read up on gassifiers before the show to prepare himself, but actually he had heard about them in his younger days in Austria, listening to two old women talking about using a gassifier for a car, I think during World War II. My recollection is hazy, but as I recall, the interviewer asks, "Wouldn’t the tar gum up the engine?" And John C. says yes, for extended use you’d need filters, declining to say more, explaining that we’ll just have to watch and see what happens. |
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Senior Member |
Well, with respect, before you someone a liar you should seriously know the facts.
As to gas powered engines and carbon monoxide in a building. Buildings all over this country are running gas powered engines indoors! Ever been in a factory? As long as the air quality remains within approved margins, they’ll run lift trucks and semis right past you…indoors. |
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Senior Member |
plus that plaace is drafty (full of air holes) and very tall ceillings.
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Senior Member |
if i remember correctly there was an open window just above the generator where the fuel tube came in
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Junior Member |
FEMA’s design will pump out tar if not properly sized to the motor. Myself,I was actually surprised that they didn’t use a filter. without a constructed filter for the engine it will tar up something fierce.
Also to be considered, the distance traveled by the hose at an up grade may have been enough to keep the tar flowing backwards to the gasifier. Where it would be consumed. The 5 gallon unit will run an engine. It’s just not a sophisticated as other updraft / downdraft designs. Also before you decry any design, you might look around on the web and find that some folks who have built the fema design can’t get their gas to light/flare. |
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Senior Member |
tar build up also depends on the type of wood used.
now a cord of pine will produce 15X the amount of tar a cord of oak will make. most of what they are useing are oak pallets. |
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Senior Member |
You can’t see or smell Carbon Monoxide. The only way to be sure that it’s a safe is to use a gas detector. I certainly hope there was at least one being used off camera at all times.
CO builds up in the blood stream in such a way that exposure to even small amounts over time can cause problems. OSHA recommends exposure to no more than 50PPM continuously over 8 hours. 800 PPM can kill you in 2 hours. |
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Junior Member |
Ya’ll better look up more info on wood gas.
The exhaust from a small engine running it is—-? It’s definitely not the same as running the engine on gas, diesel, or propane. The gas from the gasifier is more dangerous than the exhaust from the engine. Hence they operate the dangerous part outside and run the generator engine indoors. In a large building like they have, You could operate more engines and also not worry about the smoke from the cook barrel. I’ll repeat that again…there is more CO and CO2 from the gasifier direct than from the exhaust of the engine it’s running…Look it up. |
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Senior Member |
You just can’t know for sure it’s safe without a detector. You can guess, like when John C. drank the ozonated water, but you don’t know for sure. All I’m saying is that if I were the insurance company behind the show, I’d want gas detectors in the building.
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Junior Member |
Running small engines in a shop this size is a not an issue. Running big diesels would be, even with the doors open.
I question the design/size of the gasifier. The engine on the old Ford is 460-507 ci, with that big pump sucking in the gas, the fire box is going to be more like a blast furnace! What they were using for the genny was fine for a 100 cc engine but for the truck it would need to be closer in size to that of a small steam Loco to run the truck,especially with the load of passengers,cargo, wood and added body. I wouldn’t want to think about adding climbing a grade like Grapevine or Cajon Pass. Wouldn’t do it, period. |
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Senior Member |
Since birds are kind of hard to catch, I would say they shouldn’t have eaten all the rats, one could’ve been their "canary in the coal mine"
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Junior Member |
I’m also interested in seeing how it works out. If if it slow, even almost walking speed, that truck can carry a lot more weight than they could possibly carry, the biggest question I would have would be range…..better take an axe and stop to "refuel".
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Senior Member |
John V. stated a range of 150 miles.
I do suspect that tar will play a role in the finale. Even if they remember to use a filter on the truck’s gassifier, the filter is going to gunk up, so they better remember to bring spare filters. |
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