Search The Oil Drum with Google
Recently on TOD:World
TOD:Local
- Home Buyers Demand Short Commutes, Efficient Homes (with Backyards, Parking, lots of Square Feet)
- Streets: Utilitarian Corridors or Livable Public Space
- Summer Streets a Success!
TOD:Europe
- IEA WEO 2008 - NGLs to the Rescue?
- IEA WEO 2008 - Fossil Fuel Ultimates and CO2 Emissions Scenarios
- The IEA WEO 2008: Will coal usage be phased out?
TOD:Canada
- The Round-Up: October 24, 2008
- Compressed Air Energy Storage - How viable is it?
- Oil Megaproject Update (July 2008)
TOD:ANZ
Blogroll
Energy Sites
- The Coming Global Oil Crisis
- Die Off
- Dry Dipstick
- Energy Bulletin
- From the Wilderness
- Life After the Oil Crash
- Peak Oil Crisis
- Peak Oil News and Message Boards
- Powerswitch
- Rigzone
- Matthew Simmons
- Wolf at the Door
Environment & Sustainability Sites
- The Daily Green
- EcoGeek
- Eco Street
- Green Car Congress
- Green Options
- green.alltop.com
- Gristmill
- RealClimate
- Sustainablog
- Treehugger
- WorldChanging
Blogs
- The Big Picture
- Casaubon's Book
- Cleantech Blog
- Clusterf
k Nation (Jim Kunstler) - The Cost of Energy
- David Strahan
- The Energy Blog
- Entropy Production
- European Tribune
- GraphOilology
- jeffvail.net
- Mobjectivist
- Peak Energy (Australia)
- Peak Energy (USA)
- R-Squared
- Resource Insights
Finance & Economics Blogs
- Calculated Risk
- Ecological Economics
- Econbrowser
- Environmental Economics
- Infectious Greed
- The Mess That Greenspan Made
- Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
Organizations
“Where ideas are concerned, America can be counted on to do one of two things: take a good idea and run it completely into the ground, or take a bad idea and run it completely into the ground.”
—George Carlin
User login
Contact
- Content: editors at theoildrum dot com
- Tech support: support at theoildrum dot com
Personnel
- Editors: Prof. Goose, Heading Out, Stuart Staniford, Nate Hagens
- DrumBeat Editor: Leanan
- Contributors: ace, Engineer-Poet, Gail the Actuary, jeffvail, JoulesBurn, Khebab, Robert Rapier
- TOD:Local: Glenn
- TOD:Europe: Chris Vernon, Euan Mearns, Francois Cellier, Jerome a Paris, Luís de Sousa, Rembrandt, Rune Likvern, Ugo Bardi
- TOD:Canada: benk, Libelle
- TOD:ANZ: Big Gav, Phil Hart, aeldric
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.





GAIA Host Collective
You'll get a kick out of this. I'm looking up old tractors these days (any guesses why?), and found a few great ones. In the book "Farm Tractors 1950-1975" by Lester Larson on page 59, it covers an Allis Chalmers experimental fuel cell tractor from 1959. Apparently the tractor is now in the Smithsonian. In 1961, International Harvester tried a gas turbine engine. That, too, is in the Smithsonian, and probably no where else.
The kicker for me has always been that GM was experimenting with hybrids in the early 60s. When did the Prius really take off? Wasn't it 2004? So, 40 years or so for hybrids to go from experimental to production. Fuel cells even longer.
However, people have used wood gasification before. To answer my "any guesses" question above, I'm looking at old tractors since many of them were gasoline powered. Spark ignition supposedly works much better for burning wood gas. Here is a handy-dandy guide from FEMA for how to run a tractor on wood gas titled "Construction of a Simplified Wood Gas Generator for Fueling Internal Combustion Engines in a Petroleum emergency." PDF version here.
Here's a few guys here in Sweden who modified an old Volvo to wood gasification, and took a tour around all of Sweden this ummer. 5400 kilometers or something.
Around Sweden with Wood in the Tank
http://www.vedbil.se/indexe.shtml
And here's the photo page, including pictures of blonde female groupies. Apparantely wood gasification is hot with the chicks over here... (OK, only one picture, but I bet that got your attention)
http://www.vedbil.se/fotoalbume.shtml
Some facts about the car:
acts:
Top speed: 90km/h (105 km/h with dry birch wood)
Acceleration 0-100: Some times :)
Wood consumption: 1 cu m / 1000 km
Cruising range on one load: 70 km
Start-up time: 2-10 minutes
Kerb weight: 1460 kg
The producer-gas systems weight: 260 kg
On route, they visited and kicked life in an old tractor, to run on wood gasification/producer air. Blog entry, text in swedish, but there is a video of the engine once they got it going:
http://www.vedbil.se/dagbok/resa/20.shtml
And the wood gasification enthusiasts in Sweden have another website at http://www.gengas.nu/ but swedish language only. Sweden more or less survived on wood gasification during the entire WW2 (and that included agriculture), although car use naturally was much, much less than today.
And here we have the Finnish version :)
http://www.ekomobiili.fi/Tekstit/woodgas_as_fuel.htm
Finns are more neat and clean. Must be the great availability of alchohol for ... cleaning purposes. But as I recall, Finland has been a Swedish province for all but the last 200 years, so we get some of the credit. Hrmph.
I am interested in wood gas also and learned through this site
http://tinyurl.com/af8az how this guy processes his wood for use.
Maybe, but wood gas isn't much of an answer, and spark ignition is simply a pain in the neck on a farm. Animals chew the wires, moisture gets into the distributors, spark plugs always get fouled just when you really need something to run.
Better to just let the housing and credit bubbles take out some of those extra trucks on the roads and bring the price and supply of diesel fuel back where it belongs, instead of fueling all those McMansion Speculators.
Eventually, perhaps we will all have fusion power and I'm currently working on the electric tractors (battery and hybrid power) and machinery to match up. Until then, we should focus on conservation, Descent, and soil building, instead of 'replacement fuels', 'sustainable growth', and soil destruction.
Burning wood gas sounds great from a woodsman's standpoint, but from an ecological one, it's like taking the stuff that gets dumped at your local "don't ask, don't tell" collection site and burning all of it together. Most chemical companies started out as charcoal companies, and they contaminated a lot of land extracting wood gas to make the fine modern conveniences we call 'plastics' and 'chemicals'. Nowadays, they synthesize most of their concoctions from petroleum and coal. Let's not go backward if we can help it.