OT BioDiesel
#111
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Tue, 09 May 2006 15:39:42 GMT, "Steve Foley"
<steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
entire winter, but it came close...
<steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
entire winter, but it came close...
#112
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Tue, 09 May 2006 15:39:42 GMT, "Steve Foley"
<steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
entire winter, but it came close...
<steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
entire winter, but it came close...
#113
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Tue, 9 May 2006 13:41:15 -0400, "Vito" <vito@crosslink.net> wrote:
> I wish you were right but it's the dirt poor camel ----in Bedoins who are
> suicide bombers. They got little to loose. You don't see the royal Saudi
> family blowing themselves up and even Osama is staying out of sight.
Like any other endeavor, terrorism requires money... Without the money
from oil coming into the country, I seriously doubt that there would
be much in the way of terrorism being exported... In addition, without
the need for their oil, we could just let them alone and they could
ponder the more important things in life... Like whether camels or
sheep are better ----s... <snicker>
> I wish you were right but it's the dirt poor camel ----in Bedoins who are
> suicide bombers. They got little to loose. You don't see the royal Saudi
> family blowing themselves up and even Osama is staying out of sight.
Like any other endeavor, terrorism requires money... Without the money
from oil coming into the country, I seriously doubt that there would
be much in the way of terrorism being exported... In addition, without
the need for their oil, we could just let them alone and they could
ponder the more important things in life... Like whether camels or
sheep are better ----s... <snicker>
#114
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Tue, 9 May 2006 13:41:15 -0400, "Vito" <vito@crosslink.net> wrote:
> I wish you were right but it's the dirt poor camel ----in Bedoins who are
> suicide bombers. They got little to loose. You don't see the royal Saudi
> family blowing themselves up and even Osama is staying out of sight.
Like any other endeavor, terrorism requires money... Without the money
from oil coming into the country, I seriously doubt that there would
be much in the way of terrorism being exported... In addition, without
the need for their oil, we could just let them alone and they could
ponder the more important things in life... Like whether camels or
sheep are better ----s... <snicker>
> I wish you were right but it's the dirt poor camel ----in Bedoins who are
> suicide bombers. They got little to loose. You don't see the royal Saudi
> family blowing themselves up and even Osama is staying out of sight.
Like any other endeavor, terrorism requires money... Without the money
from oil coming into the country, I seriously doubt that there would
be much in the way of terrorism being exported... In addition, without
the need for their oil, we could just let them alone and they could
ponder the more important things in life... Like whether camels or
sheep are better ----s... <snicker>
#115
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Tue, 9 May 2006 13:41:15 -0400, "Vito" <vito@crosslink.net> wrote:
> I wish you were right but it's the dirt poor camel ----in Bedoins who are
> suicide bombers. They got little to loose. You don't see the royal Saudi
> family blowing themselves up and even Osama is staying out of sight.
Like any other endeavor, terrorism requires money... Without the money
from oil coming into the country, I seriously doubt that there would
be much in the way of terrorism being exported... In addition, without
the need for their oil, we could just let them alone and they could
ponder the more important things in life... Like whether camels or
sheep are better ----s... <snicker>
> I wish you were right but it's the dirt poor camel ----in Bedoins who are
> suicide bombers. They got little to loose. You don't see the royal Saudi
> family blowing themselves up and even Osama is staying out of sight.
Like any other endeavor, terrorism requires money... Without the money
from oil coming into the country, I seriously doubt that there would
be much in the way of terrorism being exported... In addition, without
the need for their oil, we could just let them alone and they could
ponder the more important things in life... Like whether camels or
sheep are better ----s... <snicker>
#116
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
Hi Steve,
And that's why the hybrid car will never be economical, nor pay for
it's self. The best that technology may do is generate government grants
and force the tax payer to reimburse the suckers with subsidies. No
where can we convert energy and get more energy out the other end.
Fortunately the Sun gave us this energy to begin with.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steve Foley wrote:
>
> Back in junior high school, we had to do a presentation on how to solve the
> energy crisis (1973). My solution was to develop a hydrogen fueled internal
> combustion engine and use it to produce electricity to produce hydrogen from
> water via electrolysis.
>
> It wasn't until college chemistry that I learned that I had designed yet
> another perpetual motion machine.
And that's why the hybrid car will never be economical, nor pay for
it's self. The best that technology may do is generate government grants
and force the tax payer to reimburse the suckers with subsidies. No
where can we convert energy and get more energy out the other end.
Fortunately the Sun gave us this energy to begin with.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steve Foley wrote:
>
> Back in junior high school, we had to do a presentation on how to solve the
> energy crisis (1973). My solution was to develop a hydrogen fueled internal
> combustion engine and use it to produce electricity to produce hydrogen from
> water via electrolysis.
>
> It wasn't until college chemistry that I learned that I had designed yet
> another perpetual motion machine.
#117
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
Hi Steve,
And that's why the hybrid car will never be economical, nor pay for
it's self. The best that technology may do is generate government grants
and force the tax payer to reimburse the suckers with subsidies. No
where can we convert energy and get more energy out the other end.
Fortunately the Sun gave us this energy to begin with.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steve Foley wrote:
>
> Back in junior high school, we had to do a presentation on how to solve the
> energy crisis (1973). My solution was to develop a hydrogen fueled internal
> combustion engine and use it to produce electricity to produce hydrogen from
> water via electrolysis.
>
> It wasn't until college chemistry that I learned that I had designed yet
> another perpetual motion machine.
And that's why the hybrid car will never be economical, nor pay for
it's self. The best that technology may do is generate government grants
and force the tax payer to reimburse the suckers with subsidies. No
where can we convert energy and get more energy out the other end.
Fortunately the Sun gave us this energy to begin with.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steve Foley wrote:
>
> Back in junior high school, we had to do a presentation on how to solve the
> energy crisis (1973). My solution was to develop a hydrogen fueled internal
> combustion engine and use it to produce electricity to produce hydrogen from
> water via electrolysis.
>
> It wasn't until college chemistry that I learned that I had designed yet
> another perpetual motion machine.
#118
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
Hi Steve,
And that's why the hybrid car will never be economical, nor pay for
it's self. The best that technology may do is generate government grants
and force the tax payer to reimburse the suckers with subsidies. No
where can we convert energy and get more energy out the other end.
Fortunately the Sun gave us this energy to begin with.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steve Foley wrote:
>
> Back in junior high school, we had to do a presentation on how to solve the
> energy crisis (1973). My solution was to develop a hydrogen fueled internal
> combustion engine and use it to produce electricity to produce hydrogen from
> water via electrolysis.
>
> It wasn't until college chemistry that I learned that I had designed yet
> another perpetual motion machine.
And that's why the hybrid car will never be economical, nor pay for
it's self. The best that technology may do is generate government grants
and force the tax payer to reimburse the suckers with subsidies. No
where can we convert energy and get more energy out the other end.
Fortunately the Sun gave us this energy to begin with.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steve Foley wrote:
>
> Back in junior high school, we had to do a presentation on how to solve the
> energy crisis (1973). My solution was to develop a hydrogen fueled internal
> combustion engine and use it to produce electricity to produce hydrogen from
> water via electrolysis.
>
> It wasn't until college chemistry that I learned that I had designed yet
> another perpetual motion machine.
#119
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
That would be so dirty, it would be like burning another petroleum
product, tires. Do you know how they scrub it, and if the
environmentalist wackos still allowing them to use oil?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Grumman-581 wrote:
>
> On Tue, 09 May 2006 15:39:42 GMT, "Steve Foley"
> <steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> > A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> > how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
>
> The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
> contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
> anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
> instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
> about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
> entire winter, but it came close...
product, tires. Do you know how they scrub it, and if the
environmentalist wackos still allowing them to use oil?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Grumman-581 wrote:
>
> On Tue, 09 May 2006 15:39:42 GMT, "Steve Foley"
> <steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> > A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> > how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
>
> The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
> contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
> anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
> instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
> about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
> entire winter, but it came close...
#120
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
That would be so dirty, it would be like burning another petroleum
product, tires. Do you know how they scrub it, and if the
environmentalist wackos still allowing them to use oil?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Grumman-581 wrote:
>
> On Tue, 09 May 2006 15:39:42 GMT, "Steve Foley"
> <steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> > A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> > how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
>
> The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
> contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
> anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
> instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
> about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
> entire winter, but it came close...
product, tires. Do you know how they scrub it, and if the
environmentalist wackos still allowing them to use oil?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Grumman-581 wrote:
>
> On Tue, 09 May 2006 15:39:42 GMT, "Steve Foley"
> <steve.foley@DELETE.att.net> wrote:
> > A friend of mine heats his hangar with used motor oil. Once he figured out
> > how to service the burner himself, his heating costs went to zero.
>
> The airport that I based my plane at up in Iowa while I was on a
> contract up there also used used motor oil for heating... They allowed
> anyone around the airport to dump their used oil in their container
> instead of having to dispose of it some other way... I asked the owner
> about it one day and he said that it didn't provide enough oil for the
> entire winter, but it came close...