Gas prices no problem, truck that burns wood

Started by Jimmy C., April 26, 2005, 10:03:50 AM

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Jimmy C.




This is very interesting... I had to share...

 From The Birmingham News
  
[size=24]Gas prices are no problem with truck that burns wood [/size]
Tuesday, April 26, 2005
WILLIAM THORNTON
News staff writer


High gas prices don't seem to faze Wayne Keith.

That's because his faded red pickup runs almost totally on wood.

"I've worn the latch off the hood because of people wanting to take a look inside," he said.

 

Keith, 57, lives on a quiet farm within sight of the St. Clair Correctional Facility outside Springville. His land is home to a cattle and hay farm, and he runs his log house on electricity from a windmill. Whatever wood he needs is provided by his sawmill.

And with regular gas prices averaging $2.17 per gallon in Alabama, according to AAA, Keith is a member of a very elite fraternity - a man satisfied with his fuel costs.

After careers in law enforcement and teaching, Keith began tinkering with junked cars. He once read about a World War II-era combustion engine design used in Europe and Australia that ran on charcoal. The only problem was the effect of tar and other emissions on the engine parts. He set out to make a more efficient system.

Last Christmas, he took a 1984 diesel truck and replaced its motor with a 1968 hot-rod engine with more horsepower. He then devised a wood-burning system with cooling and filtering units attached at the hood and in the pickup bed.

Keith estimates he has driven 4,000 miles since he converted the truck. The engine, which runs on hydrogen generated by burning the wood, is clean enough that Keith proudly shows off the spark plugs to the curious.

"Looks like they just came out of the box," he said.

He keeps a 30-gallon trash can in the bed, filled with wood pieces that have already been burned to remove water. Keith fills a 6-foot reactor in the truck bed with wood, then starts up the engine. It still takes some gas to get the truck going, but within two minutes, the only fuel is wood. He also uses gas for a little extra power when he pulls his trailer. If not for the reactor, which causes wind drag, he estimates he could reach speeds over 100 mph.


Stop, go, burn:


The pickup has three pedals - brake, gas and wood. The farthest he has driven the truck is 100 miles in a day.

"It takes about 20 pounds of wood to do what one gallon of gas will do," he said. "But when I burn off the wood, you get the same emission you'd get if the wood just deteriorated on its own. You can't say that about fossil fuels."

Still, getting out on the road is complicated. Keith rigged the dashboard with a series of levers and switches that he manipulates while driving. Experimenting over the last four months gives him a feel for how to get the truck going. But the attention required means that OPEC is probably still secure for now.

"A normal person would never be able to drive this thing," he said. "You have to be a mechanic and understand physics because it's complicated. There's a hundred things that will make this thing not work."

The engine is noisy, but smoke is visible only for a few minutes when the engine is shut off. The truck also runs with less power on soft wood. For a short trip, about 15 miles, he uses mountain oak.


Acres of fuel:


"It's a cheap ride," he said. "I've got about three acres up here, which means I've got enough fuel to do me for the rest of my natural life."

The whole wood-to-fuel system is largely made from junk parts, so it cost a paltry $50. The biggest expense, he said, was for pipes to connect the system's parts throughout the truck. The reactor only needs a clearing of ashes every 1,000 miles.

Keith often gets questions about the extras on his truck, and suspicious stares and accusations when he tries to explain. But most people arrive at their own conclusions once they see it.

"They think I'm selling boiled peanuts," he said.

E-mail: w t h o r n t o n @ b h a m n e w s . c o m


The hardest part is getting past the mental blocks about what you are capable of doing.
Cason 2-Story Project MY PROGRESS PHOTOS

glenn kangiser

#1
This truck runs on what I have been preaching about for a long time-- a wood gas generator-- unless the owner has changed  things, there are more gasses from the wood than hydrogen.

Here is a link to a copy of the stratified down draft wood gasifier improved model commissioned by the US govt years ago which they have since dropped.  It was to provide an easy means of getting power in case of war shortages of fuel.

http://www.gengas.nu/byggbes/contents.shtml

Too bad we now have to go to another country to find a copy of the technology we paid for.



Okay - so it won't look real great on the front of your  new Mercedes SUV - put it on the back. ;D
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

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Daddymem

#2
Oh yeah?  Why not run on grease?  Not all "green" things are reserved for woods dwellers (and hobbits *cough* glenn :o) , us rural people got resources too!  The restaurants have to pay someone to pump out greasetraps so you can do them a service by taking free fuel from them.
This one uses vegetable oil, other have filter systems to use the grease from restaurants too.
http://www.greasecar.com/
Où sont passées toutes nos nuits de rêve?
Aide-moi à les retrouver.
" I'm an engineer Cap'n, not a miracle worker"

http://littlehouseonthesandpit.wordpress.com/

glenn kangiser

#3
My friends (the ones above ground- whoa-- that sounds kinda scary) and I were just talking about that last night - biodiesel - I hadn't got that far yet, but was aware of it.

I can see it all now - saying- "I just love the smell of burning french fries as I drive down the road in my 1926 Dodge." ;D

You city guys (isn't everything east of the Mississippi city ??? ) are so advanced, Daddymem, but I'm trying to catch up. ;D
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

Please put your area in your sig line so we can assist with location specific answers.

Daddymem

I'm just waiting to see Buffy and Miff step out of their Volvo at the country club and stinking like McDonald's french fries. ;D
Où sont passées toutes nos nuits de rêve?
Aide-moi à les retrouver.
" I'm an engineer Cap'n, not a miracle worker"

http://littlehouseonthesandpit.wordpress.com/


Daddymem

#5
Here's another good one...did you know there's electricity in your septic tank and in the muck at the bottom of your pond?  There is!
http://www.umass.edu/newsoffice/archive/2002/011702electrodes.html
I saw this on TV (getting too many greys to have memory enough to remember which program, or maybe that's too much beer ???).  They lit a light bulb with this muck.  Nothing earth shattering yet, but the implications for large municipal wwtps make you go hmmm....

Or....picture a day in the future when you need to go somewhere, you just grab a scoop of grease from your grease supply and a scoop of ick from your septic tank and plop them in separate containers of your car.  The grease gets your car moving, the geobactors in the ick keeps it moving, maybe some wood kicks in for highway umph, all for a truly hybrid car.
Où sont passées toutes nos nuits de rêve?
Aide-moi à les retrouver.
" I'm an engineer Cap'n, not a miracle worker"

http://littlehouseonthesandpit.wordpress.com/

Amanda_931

Convert your Stanley Steamer to heat the boiler with wood instead of gasoline or kerosene?

(old friend of mine wanted badly to get into somebody's record books, found out that the land speed record for steam powered--not on tracks--vehicles was very slow, thought for a long time about fooling with one.)

http://www.stanleymotorcarriage.com/

the FAQ link down the page is nice.

glenn kangiser

#7
You shouldn't have posted that here, Daddymem, now you'll have me playing in my septic tank. :o

I wonder if this is the same technology that caused me to set the bottom of my pants on fire years ago ??? Maybe that was also the beer :-/
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

Please put your area in your sig line so we can assist with location specific answers.