I know there was research in to making a bacteria hybrid that could produce hydrogen gas. That has been a few years back. The methane route would also be a good route to go also.
Yep, that would be the guy. I had worked in a ethanol plant. If ATF was not involved to where we could run straight ethanol, they could increase the efficiency greatly. There is no way to remove the last 7% of moisture (14 proof) with out mechanical means and or lots of heat. Although engines designed to run on alcohol can run on 140 proof alcohol (70%). I am sure you already are aware of this. For those who wonder why we have to have it 100% is cause the moisture will not mix with the gasoline. From the plants they have to mix a cheap denaturant of aprox 5% so people can not boot leg it.
I would imagine you would run less rpm's since the chainsaw was designed for gasoline. Alcohol gets its best bang for the buck with higher compression and not so much of a retarded timing like gas takes to keep from detonating at wrong time. Have either one of you heard of David Blume, "Alcohol Can Be A Gas"?
I am glad you reposted. I like the idea you made it in several posts. One long post like some I have seen makes it hard to read sitting 3 feet back! My dad loved working with concrete, so I had some experiences with it. As you had said, pour too fast you may blow all the forms apart from the hydraulic pressures. I hope you do touch once again on how you was going to make castings to set in place.
I agree. I like to watch him once in a while also. This society of building 500,000 dollar homes and higher does not impress me. I will never have a home that nice but smile when I think about not owing any thing on my house that is not up to code!
Slow sand biofilters do help if only to bring down the turbidity. For those who does not know, turbidity can harbor coliforms which is used in labs to determine potential risks of pathogenic bacterias. What is the SODIS method? Can you explain it more?