lol, thats actually pretty damn funny.
9/27/2005 3:39:37 PM
I support the renewable fuels (from plants) as an alternative that could be implemented relatively quickly. I figure that it would give farmers something to do, as they could grow damn near any crop that oil can be produced from, and it's soluble with diesel (so I hear), so it could be dumped right into a fuel tank at a gas station. Biggest problem though with it - cold weather.Also important, the money stays in the US. Even biodiesel blends keep a chunk of that $2.80/gallon in the US.
9/27/2005 3:39:52 PM
I admit there is no standing infrastructure to support the production of hydrogen in vast quantities. The reason for this is mainly we dont have the investments/support from big corporations. We dont have the equipment to handle hydrogen in a production facility that creates it on a large scale. I'm not saying it couldn't be done. I believe it can and will enivably be done. It just takes experimentation to get a new form of energy become a practical fuel for our economy. They didn't start making nuclear power plants as soon as they figured out fission.
9/27/2005 3:40:13 PM
This is interesting, the first google response from "hydrogen production at home"http://www.dangerouslaboratories.org/h2homesystem.pdf[Edited on September 27, 2005 at 3:49 PM. Reason : production not power]
9/27/2005 3:49:13 PM
9/27/2005 4:16:08 PM
if the government could lead by example and convert all their fleets to bio-diesel, that would really kickass. (referring to state, local, and federal here)
9/27/2005 4:42:38 PM
a lot of state and federal fleet vehicles do currently run on bio-diesel, e-85, propane and some busses have cng
9/27/2005 4:53:08 PM
MONORAIL!
9/27/2005 4:56:23 PM
Anyone know what blend of biodiesel they're running on? (B100 is pure biodiesel)
9/27/2005 4:57:42 PM
http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/infrastructure/locator.htmlThis locator shows a fair amount of fueling stations for BioDiesel in the triangle. Most are government only but there are some public ones. It doesn't indicate however what percentage blend.I saw over the weekend in Knoxville that the public buses run on 100% biodiesel.Not much ethanol here in Tennessee and even less in N.C. Although that is probably for the best. If the midwest is best for growing corn/soy for ethanol, keep it local to there.I think you can also make biodiesel from wood, which is renewable, so that would be good for the northeast and northwest. In the southwest they can refine hydrogen via solar power in the desert.
9/27/2005 5:08:15 PM
I like this discussion. Biodiesel is a very attractive alternative for the oil burners, and vegetable oil is another possibility if the right equipment can be had. I think currently, there is no viable alternative to gasoline - the way things are at this moment. There are issues with all alternatives, but my opinion is that with some effort and investment, many of the alternatives will become feasible. Think of all the tobacco farmers living on government subsidies and tobacco buyout programs because the demand for tobacco has dropped with all the smoking lawsuits. These farmers would be prime candidates to start growing crops specifically for use as a base for biomass fuels. I think ethanol is an attractive alternative, but it has some drawbacks. I think these drawbacks can be overcome with various additive packages if someone were to spend some time on such things. I think the best use of resources is to work toward an alternative that will work with the internal combustion engines we know today; we don't need to reinvent the wheel, i.e. fuel cell technology and battery powered vehicles. The way I see it is gasoline has had around 100 years of development time to become what we know it today. Spend the same amount of time on an alternative, and I bet the drawbacks won't be issues anymore.
9/27/2005 5:13:48 PM
^^ I know of two biodiesel stations available to the public in the area right now. One is in Garner (I don't know the exact location), and the other is the BP on 64 near MacGregor village. I know the BP uses B20, and I think the other is the same.
9/27/2005 5:22:56 PM
Production Averages For Ten Common Oil CropsPlant, Laitin Name, lb. oil/acre, kg. oil/hectare,oil palm, Elaesi guineensis, 4,585 5,000cocunut, Cocos nucifera, 2,070 2,260jatropha, Jatropha curcas, 1,460 1,590rapeseed, Brassica napus, 915 1,000sunflower, Arachis hypogaea, 815 890safflower, Carthamus tinctorius, 605 655soybean, Glycine max, 345 375hemp, Cannabis sativa, 280 305corn, Zea mays, 135 145Other sources include billions of pounds of animal fat produced from cattle farms and the like plus reusable oil from your school cafeterias and fast food restaurants. I think if we started cultivating the palm oil, the greatest oil producing tree which is native to Africa, we could supply the nations fuel thirst quite well. We could genetically alter the palm oil to grow in varied climates.[Edited on September 27, 2005 at 5:32 PM. Reason : data from "From the Fryer to the Fuel Tank by Joshua Tickell"]
9/27/2005 5:29:51 PM
isnt palm oil production already killing a lot of rainforest?
9/27/2005 5:31:23 PM
That didn't cross my mind since i'm talking about US farmers growing it.
9/27/2005 5:33:53 PM
could we even grow it here?
9/27/2005 5:35:50 PM
Please read my post in it's entirety next time.
9/27/2005 5:41:48 PM
no i read the part about the happy magic gene manipulationim talking about now
9/27/2005 5:44:35 PM
9/27/2005 6:33:50 PM
WHALE OIL
9/27/2005 6:53:25 PM
GASOLINE!ITS GOOD ECONOMICALLY AND THERES PLENTY OF IT! COME ON NOW, WHY DO YOU WANT TO GIVE IT UP???
9/27/2005 7:07:17 PM
9/27/2005 9:48:09 PM
our resource officers had gunsim from durham though
9/27/2005 9:56:21 PM
this is FUCKING REDICULOUS as if i hadnt already been proven correct when i say hydrogen is easily extractably from water, and researchers contine to make it easier http://www.ncsu.edu/front pagehttp://www.ncsu.edu/news/press_releases/05_09/188.htm
9/29/2005 9:01:09 PM
We should make a car that ran on AIDS. We'd never run out and Africa would be rich as shit.
9/29/2005 9:08:09 PM
9/29/2005 9:22:39 PM
how do you defend the argument that it also takes energy to get crude from the ground, transport it to refineries, refine it, and distribute using itself?does anyone know what the current efficiency of this process is? Queti, maybe?
9/29/2005 9:31:41 PM
9/29/2005 9:34:45 PM
9/29/2005 9:43:41 PM
You can heat water to 1000, it's called steam. Of course, that doesn't 'sound' more efficient than simple electrolysis. That said, electrolysis is a bitch when it comes to efficiency, less than 20% last I heard.
9/29/2005 9:43:42 PM
You'll be hearing higher numbers soon enough Lone Snark. Especially with the use of nano technology.
9/29/2005 9:46:16 PM
9/29/2005 10:28:02 PM
9/29/2005 10:58:46 PM
9/30/2005 1:08:48 AM
I only read the first partbreaking up molecules into atoms =/= breaking apart atoms
9/30/2005 1:13:53 AM
they are more similar than you think, Steve.
9/30/2005 1:22:42 AM
oh, right, carry on
9/30/2005 1:33:18 AM
I'm with ya, aaronburro.
9/30/2005 9:18:28 AM
I too support the aaronburro. But you might point it out another way to supercalo: after we have separated up the parts of crude oil, we then burn the fuels produced that no one wants to sell, to generate the heat necessary to continue separating the fuels. From the separators stand-point, we put in crude oil, and out comes gasoline, butane, diesel, natural gas, and tar. Their is only an initial energy injection to get the whole process started, plus whatever electricity is used for command and control. Alternatively, after you burn hydrogen, all you have is water. If you want hydrogen again you need to inject more electricity into the car. My question is, if nickel metal batteries are readily recycleable, doesn't that mean there won't be a major environmental problem with their use and we don't need to worry about running out of the materials that go into the battery?
9/30/2005 10:24:11 AM
they're recyclable, but nothing's 100% recyclable. I don't know alot about the batteries, but you only get a portion of the original material back in recycling, so eventually, you'll still run out
9/30/2005 11:45:47 AM
^ Of course we are "eventually" going to run out. But as with most metals, even at a paltry 80% recycling rate the earth has enough proven reserves to last the next thousand years. So I wouldn't worry too much about it.
9/30/2005 12:13:43 PM
9/30/2005 3:43:30 PM
^and hence another financial and technological hundle to jump....which goes back to my first or second post
9/30/2005 3:46:42 PM
And if the history of technology has taught us anything, it's that we're utterly incapable of jumping these hurdles.Maybe we'll get lucky and find oil on Mars.
9/30/2005 3:55:25 PM
9/30/2005 3:59:37 PM
^^I'm not saying its impossible to jump the hundle. Just saying its a hurdle.^All true. Hydrogen will have to be in compressed liquid form for vehicles the way I see it.
9/30/2005 4:37:28 PM
i want a car that runs on crude oil like aaronburros
9/30/2005 4:56:15 PM
Hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in the next decade, and we're talking about using food to fuel our cars
9/30/2005 5:02:30 PM
i'm not weakI'M ALTERNATIVELY POWERED
9/30/2005 5:05:30 PM
9/30/2005 6:09:45 PM