OT BioDiesel
#62
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:39:03 -0700, "L.W.(Bill) ------ III"
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> That's where our gun power comes from. Time to buy another thousand
> rounds.
Only a thousand rounds? Hell, that's only good for a couple hours of
plinking...
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> That's where our gun power comes from. Time to buy another thousand
> rounds.
Only a thousand rounds? Hell, that's only good for a couple hours of
plinking...
#63
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:39:03 -0700, "L.W.(Bill) ------ III"
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> That's where our gun power comes from. Time to buy another thousand
> rounds.
Only a thousand rounds? Hell, that's only good for a couple hours of
plinking...
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> That's where our gun power comes from. Time to buy another thousand
> rounds.
Only a thousand rounds? Hell, that's only good for a couple hours of
plinking...
#64
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:39:03 -0700, "L.W.(Bill) ------ III"
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> That's where our gun power comes from. Time to buy another thousand
> rounds.
Only a thousand rounds? Hell, that's only good for a couple hours of
plinking...
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> That's where our gun power comes from. Time to buy another thousand
> rounds.
Only a thousand rounds? Hell, that's only good for a couple hours of
plinking...
#65
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
Bill has a point. All this stuff looks like waste now, and cheap too. But
if people start using it, then the fryolator oil that my neighbor tosses
into the trash will be a hundred bucks a gallon, plus the cost to filter it.
If you as a private user set up to use it now, you will just be hurt later
on, when you can't get the stuff for free any more.
Earle
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44600E47.16E6C42C@***.net...
> Gasoline used to be a useless byproduct of kerosene, too. How long
> to you thing if people paid for used frying grease before they started
> charging for it, may all the way up as their cost increase too with
> supply and demand, to well above the ninety ducks a gallon now:
> http://www.sparkleretail.com/P-B0007DA4GK.html
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year. Plus zapping the heck out of us via subsidies with higher and
> higher taxes.
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Grumman-581 wrote:
> >
> > Not sure if you're accurate on that, but even so, bio-diesel takes
> > something that normally would be thrown away and gets some use out of
> > it...
> >
> > I test drove the VW Jetta TDI (diesel) today that I'm thinking of
> > getting to replace Grace's WJ... Acceptable accelleration... It
> > actually felt like it had more elbow room than the WJ... The Tiptronic
> > shift make an automatic nearly bearable... From what I hear, people
> > are reporting around 48 mpg on the highway with it... Yeah, it's not a
> > Jeep, but maybe she won't roll it either... <grin>
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
if people start using it, then the fryolator oil that my neighbor tosses
into the trash will be a hundred bucks a gallon, plus the cost to filter it.
If you as a private user set up to use it now, you will just be hurt later
on, when you can't get the stuff for free any more.
Earle
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44600E47.16E6C42C@***.net...
> Gasoline used to be a useless byproduct of kerosene, too. How long
> to you thing if people paid for used frying grease before they started
> charging for it, may all the way up as their cost increase too with
> supply and demand, to well above the ninety ducks a gallon now:
> http://www.sparkleretail.com/P-B0007DA4GK.html
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year. Plus zapping the heck out of us via subsidies with higher and
> higher taxes.
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Grumman-581 wrote:
> >
> > Not sure if you're accurate on that, but even so, bio-diesel takes
> > something that normally would be thrown away and gets some use out of
> > it...
> >
> > I test drove the VW Jetta TDI (diesel) today that I'm thinking of
> > getting to replace Grace's WJ... Acceptable accelleration... It
> > actually felt like it had more elbow room than the WJ... The Tiptronic
> > shift make an automatic nearly bearable... From what I hear, people
> > are reporting around 48 mpg on the highway with it... Yeah, it's not a
> > Jeep, but maybe she won't roll it either... <grin>
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
#66
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
Bill has a point. All this stuff looks like waste now, and cheap too. But
if people start using it, then the fryolator oil that my neighbor tosses
into the trash will be a hundred bucks a gallon, plus the cost to filter it.
If you as a private user set up to use it now, you will just be hurt later
on, when you can't get the stuff for free any more.
Earle
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44600E47.16E6C42C@***.net...
> Gasoline used to be a useless byproduct of kerosene, too. How long
> to you thing if people paid for used frying grease before they started
> charging for it, may all the way up as their cost increase too with
> supply and demand, to well above the ninety ducks a gallon now:
> http://www.sparkleretail.com/P-B0007DA4GK.html
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year. Plus zapping the heck out of us via subsidies with higher and
> higher taxes.
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Grumman-581 wrote:
> >
> > Not sure if you're accurate on that, but even so, bio-diesel takes
> > something that normally would be thrown away and gets some use out of
> > it...
> >
> > I test drove the VW Jetta TDI (diesel) today that I'm thinking of
> > getting to replace Grace's WJ... Acceptable accelleration... It
> > actually felt like it had more elbow room than the WJ... The Tiptronic
> > shift make an automatic nearly bearable... From what I hear, people
> > are reporting around 48 mpg on the highway with it... Yeah, it's not a
> > Jeep, but maybe she won't roll it either... <grin>
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
if people start using it, then the fryolator oil that my neighbor tosses
into the trash will be a hundred bucks a gallon, plus the cost to filter it.
If you as a private user set up to use it now, you will just be hurt later
on, when you can't get the stuff for free any more.
Earle
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44600E47.16E6C42C@***.net...
> Gasoline used to be a useless byproduct of kerosene, too. How long
> to you thing if people paid for used frying grease before they started
> charging for it, may all the way up as their cost increase too with
> supply and demand, to well above the ninety ducks a gallon now:
> http://www.sparkleretail.com/P-B0007DA4GK.html
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year. Plus zapping the heck out of us via subsidies with higher and
> higher taxes.
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Grumman-581 wrote:
> >
> > Not sure if you're accurate on that, but even so, bio-diesel takes
> > something that normally would be thrown away and gets some use out of
> > it...
> >
> > I test drove the VW Jetta TDI (diesel) today that I'm thinking of
> > getting to replace Grace's WJ... Acceptable accelleration... It
> > actually felt like it had more elbow room than the WJ... The Tiptronic
> > shift make an automatic nearly bearable... From what I hear, people
> > are reporting around 48 mpg on the highway with it... Yeah, it's not a
> > Jeep, but maybe she won't roll it either... <grin>
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
#67
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
Bill has a point. All this stuff looks like waste now, and cheap too. But
if people start using it, then the fryolator oil that my neighbor tosses
into the trash will be a hundred bucks a gallon, plus the cost to filter it.
If you as a private user set up to use it now, you will just be hurt later
on, when you can't get the stuff for free any more.
Earle
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44600E47.16E6C42C@***.net...
> Gasoline used to be a useless byproduct of kerosene, too. How long
> to you thing if people paid for used frying grease before they started
> charging for it, may all the way up as their cost increase too with
> supply and demand, to well above the ninety ducks a gallon now:
> http://www.sparkleretail.com/P-B0007DA4GK.html
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year. Plus zapping the heck out of us via subsidies with higher and
> higher taxes.
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Grumman-581 wrote:
> >
> > Not sure if you're accurate on that, but even so, bio-diesel takes
> > something that normally would be thrown away and gets some use out of
> > it...
> >
> > I test drove the VW Jetta TDI (diesel) today that I'm thinking of
> > getting to replace Grace's WJ... Acceptable accelleration... It
> > actually felt like it had more elbow room than the WJ... The Tiptronic
> > shift make an automatic nearly bearable... From what I hear, people
> > are reporting around 48 mpg on the highway with it... Yeah, it's not a
> > Jeep, but maybe she won't roll it either... <grin>
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
if people start using it, then the fryolator oil that my neighbor tosses
into the trash will be a hundred bucks a gallon, plus the cost to filter it.
If you as a private user set up to use it now, you will just be hurt later
on, when you can't get the stuff for free any more.
Earle
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44600E47.16E6C42C@***.net...
> Gasoline used to be a useless byproduct of kerosene, too. How long
> to you thing if people paid for used frying grease before they started
> charging for it, may all the way up as their cost increase too with
> supply and demand, to well above the ninety ducks a gallon now:
> http://www.sparkleretail.com/P-B0007DA4GK.html
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year. Plus zapping the heck out of us via subsidies with higher and
> higher taxes.
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Grumman-581 wrote:
> >
> > Not sure if you're accurate on that, but even so, bio-diesel takes
> > something that normally would be thrown away and gets some use out of
> > it...
> >
> > I test drove the VW Jetta TDI (diesel) today that I'm thinking of
> > getting to replace Grace's WJ... Acceptable accelleration... It
> > actually felt like it had more elbow room than the WJ... The Tiptronic
> > shift make an automatic nearly bearable... From what I hear, people
> > are reporting around 48 mpg on the highway with it... Yeah, it's not a
> > Jeep, but maybe she won't roll it either... <grin>
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
#68
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:36:39 -0700, "L.W.(Bill) ------ III"
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year.
I always figured that making ethanol from corn and putting it in
*cars* was a waste of good liquor... Corn liquor should be put in your
*stomach*...
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
Once we perfect nuclear *fusion*, we'll be doing great... We'll have
enough extra energy to use that we can just produce hydrogen from
water via electrolysis... Converting an internal combustion engine to
run on hydrogen is not anywhere as complex as developing a fuel
cell... Of course, we're trading the complexity of developing a fuel
cell to the complexity of developing nuclear fusion... <grin>
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...
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year.
I always figured that making ethanol from corn and putting it in
*cars* was a waste of good liquor... Corn liquor should be put in your
*stomach*...
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
Once we perfect nuclear *fusion*, we'll be doing great... We'll have
enough extra energy to use that we can just produce hydrogen from
water via electrolysis... Converting an internal combustion engine to
run on hydrogen is not anywhere as complex as developing a fuel
cell... Of course, we're trading the complexity of developing a fuel
cell to the complexity of developing nuclear fusion... <grin>
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...
#69
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:36:39 -0700, "L.W.(Bill) ------ III"
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year.
I always figured that making ethanol from corn and putting it in
*cars* was a waste of good liquor... Corn liquor should be put in your
*stomach*...
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
Once we perfect nuclear *fusion*, we'll be doing great... We'll have
enough extra energy to use that we can just produce hydrogen from
water via electrolysis... Converting an internal combustion engine to
run on hydrogen is not anywhere as complex as developing a fuel
cell... Of course, we're trading the complexity of developing a fuel
cell to the complexity of developing nuclear fusion... <grin>
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...
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year.
I always figured that making ethanol from corn and putting it in
*cars* was a waste of good liquor... Corn liquor should be put in your
*stomach*...
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
Once we perfect nuclear *fusion*, we'll be doing great... We'll have
enough extra energy to use that we can just produce hydrogen from
water via electrolysis... Converting an internal combustion engine to
run on hydrogen is not anywhere as complex as developing a fuel
cell... Of course, we're trading the complexity of developing a fuel
cell to the complexity of developing nuclear fusion... <grin>
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...
#70
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT BioDiesel
On Mon, 08 May 2006 20:36:39 -0700, "L.W.(Bill) ------ III"
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year.
I always figured that making ethanol from corn and putting it in
*cars* was a waste of good liquor... Corn liquor should be put in your
*stomach*...
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
Once we perfect nuclear *fusion*, we'll be doing great... We'll have
enough extra energy to use that we can just produce hydrogen from
water via electrolysis... Converting an internal combustion engine to
run on hydrogen is not anywhere as complex as developing a fuel
cell... Of course, we're trading the complexity of developing a fuel
cell to the complexity of developing nuclear fusion... <grin>
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...
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Our farmer can't produce now, even if all their foods were converted
> to the making alcohol their total would fuel Kalifornia for only one day
> a year.
I always figured that making ethanol from corn and putting it in
*cars* was a waste of good liquor... Corn liquor should be put in your
*stomach*...
> Until the bleeding heart liberal wacko limp democrats let us use
> nuclear energy, at least to power our homes, gasoline will remain the
> cheapest fuel we may use.
Once we perfect nuclear *fusion*, we'll be doing great... We'll have
enough extra energy to use that we can just produce hydrogen from
water via electrolysis... Converting an internal combustion engine to
run on hydrogen is not anywhere as complex as developing a fuel
cell... Of course, we're trading the complexity of developing a fuel
cell to the complexity of developing nuclear fusion... <grin>
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...