Justus Walker wrote:I am a long time gasifier enthusiast. Enthusiast in the youtube, armchair type. Never done much more than a coffee can gasifier in real life. Now I want to get serious and start producing my own energy using a gasifier. I was wondering if any one had REAL life experience or could comment on the following models that are commercially available. I know that I do not want to build my own, since the techniques of tar cracking and high grade filtration are better handled by professionals, I think.
Justus Walker wrote:Marcoss, Thanks for the reply. I agree with just about everything you say. I'll check out driveonwood.com! Thanks! I live in Siberia and we have a lot of waste wood of all kinds that I could gasify. We also have a very short solar day in the winter and an obvious need for as much heat as we can get from various sources. So, although I don't necessarily think that CHP is a prerequisite to gasification as a viable energy alternative, I will be setting up such a system.
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Abe Connally wrote:the Victoria gasifier is the best design I've seen.
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R Scott wrote:
Abe Connally wrote:the Victoria gasifier is the best design I've seen.
That is a good looking design, but what do they make that lower nozzle out of? That one is going to be unobtanium to handle the environment for any length of time.
I have been toying with the idea, but I do not have a good feedstock source--everything is too small or too big--and I would spend more on pelleting or chunking than I could get out of a gasifier.
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Walt Holton wrote:I am going to be building a small stationary gasifier this winter to run up to a 25 hp engine, harvesting the waste heat via water coils and jackets, however on a staionary unit I see cooling the gasses before they reach the intake manifold as the biggest chalenge to a small uint. I had an idea which probably would not work too well on mobile units (trucks) but may be a silver bullet on the stationary units, which would cool the gas in a small area and provide perhaps the entire filtering of solids need. My idea is... directly after the gasifier combustion unit, run the hot smoke through a bong (perhaps a 5 gallon bucket). I have two concerns with this strategy- 1) I do not know the dewpoint of the actual gasses which the engine needs to run, and would they perhaps be held in the bong water. 2) Re-condensing the vapor that would be added to the smoke, post bong. I think the second is less of a concern than the first and could be addresed with a small baffled chamber (aluminum would be best), with a drain bung, since the post bong fuel temp would be not too far from ambient air. Has anyone heard of, or had experience with a bong cooler/fliterer on a gasifier?
Walt
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Walt Holton wrote:Thannks Abe, I will look at Mother Earth and see if I can find that article. I was planning on using the bong for as part of the heat exchange cycle (and storage in an old water heater for space heat or aquaculture) because my intent is to have little or no losses of productive energy in the system, besides the friction losses in the engine which if I went totaly bonkers I could probably harvest as well. My two thoughs were to either coil copper pipe in the bong and circulate the water to harvest the energy or do a jacket around the bong (putting a big vessel around a smaller one) and exchanging that water to keep it cool. I think the key will be keeping that bong water as cool as possible to minimalize the vapor.
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Walt Holton wrote:Abe, thanks for the ideas. I have been thinking of putting it in a fireproof/ thermal mass room in the the basement the next home I build, but between then (gotta sell the current house first) and now it is time to brain storm, and study, study the physics behind it and observe sucess and failures. of working models. My profession is home construction, and the last number of years I have specialied in high performance construction/desigh/building science, with a balanced approach of energy conservation, occupant comfort, building durability and simplicity, and occupant health.
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