OT BioDiesel
Guest
Posts: n/a
I was actually surprised to find out how little of our oil supply comes
from the mideast any more.
Vito proclaimed:
> "Grumman-581" <grumman581@DIE-SPAMMER-SCUM-gmail.com> wrote
>
>>Of course, an added advantage of using hydrogen to power our cars is
>>that terrorism would be reduced since without the money from oil, the
>>Mid East would go back to being the *poor* camel ----in' Bedoins that
>>they have been throughout most of their history...
>
>
> 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.
>
>
from the mideast any more.
Vito proclaimed:
> "Grumman-581" <grumman581@DIE-SPAMMER-SCUM-gmail.com> wrote
>
>>Of course, an added advantage of using hydrogen to power our cars is
>>that terrorism would be reduced since without the money from oil, the
>>Mid East would go back to being the *poor* camel ----in' Bedoins that
>>they have been throughout most of their history...
>
>
> 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.
>
>
Guest
Posts: n/a
Like where all the sheep died.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Guest
Posts: n/a
Like where all the sheep died.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Guest
Posts: n/a
Like where all the sheep died.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Guest
Posts: n/a
Also releases more radioactive carbon than a small nuke.
L.W.(Bill) ------ III proclaimed:
> And coal releases argon radiation, far more dangerous than anything
> the nuclear plant could leak:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~bhoglund/...ion_Facts.html
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
>>Sure, but everyone has their own little soap box to stand on, don't they?
>>;^)
>>
>>Damn right I'm being sarcastic. Electricity in Colorado is made from coal.
>>You want to drive by one of the power plants, when it is running wide open
>>throttle to generate clean power for the sunny and unpolluted Rocky Mountain
>>states. We had those commercials in New England too, set to music.
>>
>>Earle
L.W.(Bill) ------ III proclaimed:
> And coal releases argon radiation, far more dangerous than anything
> the nuclear plant could leak:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~bhoglund/...ion_Facts.html
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
>>Sure, but everyone has their own little soap box to stand on, don't they?
>>;^)
>>
>>Damn right I'm being sarcastic. Electricity in Colorado is made from coal.
>>You want to drive by one of the power plants, when it is running wide open
>>throttle to generate clean power for the sunny and unpolluted Rocky Mountain
>>states. We had those commercials in New England too, set to music.
>>
>>Earle
Guest
Posts: n/a
Also releases more radioactive carbon than a small nuke.
L.W.(Bill) ------ III proclaimed:
> And coal releases argon radiation, far more dangerous than anything
> the nuclear plant could leak:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~bhoglund/...ion_Facts.html
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
>>Sure, but everyone has their own little soap box to stand on, don't they?
>>;^)
>>
>>Damn right I'm being sarcastic. Electricity in Colorado is made from coal.
>>You want to drive by one of the power plants, when it is running wide open
>>throttle to generate clean power for the sunny and unpolluted Rocky Mountain
>>states. We had those commercials in New England too, set to music.
>>
>>Earle
L.W.(Bill) ------ III proclaimed:
> And coal releases argon radiation, far more dangerous than anything
> the nuclear plant could leak:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~bhoglund/...ion_Facts.html
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
>>Sure, but everyone has their own little soap box to stand on, don't they?
>>;^)
>>
>>Damn right I'm being sarcastic. Electricity in Colorado is made from coal.
>>You want to drive by one of the power plants, when it is running wide open
>>throttle to generate clean power for the sunny and unpolluted Rocky Mountain
>>states. We had those commercials in New England too, set to music.
>>
>>Earle
Guest
Posts: n/a
Also releases more radioactive carbon than a small nuke.
L.W.(Bill) ------ III proclaimed:
> And coal releases argon radiation, far more dangerous than anything
> the nuclear plant could leak:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~bhoglund/...ion_Facts.html
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
>>Sure, but everyone has their own little soap box to stand on, don't they?
>>;^)
>>
>>Damn right I'm being sarcastic. Electricity in Colorado is made from coal.
>>You want to drive by one of the power plants, when it is running wide open
>>throttle to generate clean power for the sunny and unpolluted Rocky Mountain
>>states. We had those commercials in New England too, set to music.
>>
>>Earle
L.W.(Bill) ------ III proclaimed:
> And coal releases argon radiation, far more dangerous than anything
> the nuclear plant could leak:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~bhoglund/...ion_Facts.html
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
>>Sure, but everyone has their own little soap box to stand on, don't they?
>>;^)
>>
>>Damn right I'm being sarcastic. Electricity in Colorado is made from coal.
>>You want to drive by one of the power plants, when it is running wide open
>>throttle to generate clean power for the sunny and unpolluted Rocky Mountain
>>states. We had those commercials in New England too, set to music.
>>
>>Earle
Guest
Posts: n/a
XS11E proclaimed:
> "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in
> news:44615d08$0$6055$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.co m:
>
>
>>When I was young and foolish, I bought plans for a home sized used
>>motor oil furnace, from the Mother Earth News. My eyes bugged out
>>of my head when I read them. You were supposed to use a manual
>>valve and a home made "nozzle", to control the drip rate of the
>>oil, as it dropped on pieces of fire brick, placed on a burner,
>>made out of a frying pan. You got the fire going with kerosene or
>>barbecue lighter fluid. I am still alive. That means I must not
>>have made the thing.
>
>
> If you had made it, it would have worked. Years back we had a
> commercial fuel oil heater made exactly as you describe, it worked to
> perfection and heated one end of our house, the wood stove in the
> kitchen heated the other end. Unlike the one you describe, ours did
> have a fairly elaborate chimmney to exhaust the fumes.
>
The better old burners had forced air to keep a smaller flame hotter
with less soot. Bummer but all used motor oil has a pretty good load of
sulfur in it.
> "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in
> news:44615d08$0$6055$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.co m:
>
>
>>When I was young and foolish, I bought plans for a home sized used
>>motor oil furnace, from the Mother Earth News. My eyes bugged out
>>of my head when I read them. You were supposed to use a manual
>>valve and a home made "nozzle", to control the drip rate of the
>>oil, as it dropped on pieces of fire brick, placed on a burner,
>>made out of a frying pan. You got the fire going with kerosene or
>>barbecue lighter fluid. I am still alive. That means I must not
>>have made the thing.
>
>
> If you had made it, it would have worked. Years back we had a
> commercial fuel oil heater made exactly as you describe, it worked to
> perfection and heated one end of our house, the wood stove in the
> kitchen heated the other end. Unlike the one you describe, ours did
> have a fairly elaborate chimmney to exhaust the fumes.
>
The better old burners had forced air to keep a smaller flame hotter
with less soot. Bummer but all used motor oil has a pretty good load of
sulfur in it.
Guest
Posts: n/a
XS11E proclaimed:
> "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in
> news:44615d08$0$6055$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.co m:
>
>
>>When I was young and foolish, I bought plans for a home sized used
>>motor oil furnace, from the Mother Earth News. My eyes bugged out
>>of my head when I read them. You were supposed to use a manual
>>valve and a home made "nozzle", to control the drip rate of the
>>oil, as it dropped on pieces of fire brick, placed on a burner,
>>made out of a frying pan. You got the fire going with kerosene or
>>barbecue lighter fluid. I am still alive. That means I must not
>>have made the thing.
>
>
> If you had made it, it would have worked. Years back we had a
> commercial fuel oil heater made exactly as you describe, it worked to
> perfection and heated one end of our house, the wood stove in the
> kitchen heated the other end. Unlike the one you describe, ours did
> have a fairly elaborate chimmney to exhaust the fumes.
>
The better old burners had forced air to keep a smaller flame hotter
with less soot. Bummer but all used motor oil has a pretty good load of
sulfur in it.
> "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in
> news:44615d08$0$6055$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.co m:
>
>
>>When I was young and foolish, I bought plans for a home sized used
>>motor oil furnace, from the Mother Earth News. My eyes bugged out
>>of my head when I read them. You were supposed to use a manual
>>valve and a home made "nozzle", to control the drip rate of the
>>oil, as it dropped on pieces of fire brick, placed on a burner,
>>made out of a frying pan. You got the fire going with kerosene or
>>barbecue lighter fluid. I am still alive. That means I must not
>>have made the thing.
>
>
> If you had made it, it would have worked. Years back we had a
> commercial fuel oil heater made exactly as you describe, it worked to
> perfection and heated one end of our house, the wood stove in the
> kitchen heated the other end. Unlike the one you describe, ours did
> have a fairly elaborate chimmney to exhaust the fumes.
>
The better old burners had forced air to keep a smaller flame hotter
with less soot. Bummer but all used motor oil has a pretty good load of
sulfur in it.
Guest
Posts: n/a
XS11E proclaimed:
> "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in
> news:44615d08$0$6055$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.co m:
>
>
>>When I was young and foolish, I bought plans for a home sized used
>>motor oil furnace, from the Mother Earth News. My eyes bugged out
>>of my head when I read them. You were supposed to use a manual
>>valve and a home made "nozzle", to control the drip rate of the
>>oil, as it dropped on pieces of fire brick, placed on a burner,
>>made out of a frying pan. You got the fire going with kerosene or
>>barbecue lighter fluid. I am still alive. That means I must not
>>have made the thing.
>
>
> If you had made it, it would have worked. Years back we had a
> commercial fuel oil heater made exactly as you describe, it worked to
> perfection and heated one end of our house, the wood stove in the
> kitchen heated the other end. Unlike the one you describe, ours did
> have a fairly elaborate chimmney to exhaust the fumes.
>
The better old burners had forced air to keep a smaller flame hotter
with less soot. Bummer but all used motor oil has a pretty good load of
sulfur in it.
> "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in
> news:44615d08$0$6055$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.co m:
>
>
>>When I was young and foolish, I bought plans for a home sized used
>>motor oil furnace, from the Mother Earth News. My eyes bugged out
>>of my head when I read them. You were supposed to use a manual
>>valve and a home made "nozzle", to control the drip rate of the
>>oil, as it dropped on pieces of fire brick, placed on a burner,
>>made out of a frying pan. You got the fire going with kerosene or
>>barbecue lighter fluid. I am still alive. That means I must not
>>have made the thing.
>
>
> If you had made it, it would have worked. Years back we had a
> commercial fuel oil heater made exactly as you describe, it worked to
> perfection and heated one end of our house, the wood stove in the
> kitchen heated the other end. Unlike the one you describe, ours did
> have a fairly elaborate chimmney to exhaust the fumes.
>
The better old burners had forced air to keep a smaller flame hotter
with less soot. Bummer but all used motor oil has a pretty good load of
sulfur in it.


