I could not find out who is the responsible company/group for this website (www.ethanol-news.com).
Can someone please tell me?
Thanks
Filed in: Wind, Alternative Energy, Solar, Renewable Fuel, Ethanol, Bio-diesel, Uncategorized
I could not find out who is the responsible company/group for this website (www.ethanol-news.com).
Can someone please tell me?
Thanks
Filed in: Wind, Alternative Energy, Solar, Renewable Fuel, Ethanol, Bio-diesel, Uncategorized
I know that the earlier model and many foreign cars (until recently) were not prepared to accept a different fuel form.
These cars run rough, have numerous mechanical issues.
But, now with this added information, has anyone investigated what the potential damage to any automobile would be? Does this “fuel” flush through the system fast enough to prevent damage? How about a car that gets little usage?
IDK, it would seem to me the metals are very thin and I would believer that there are stagnant areas along the fuel route.
Filed in: Hybrids, Automobiles, Alternative Energy, Renewable Fuel, Ethanol
Pipe liners and pipefitters, not plumbers, construct or lay, pipelines and refieries. This includes destileris.
Ethonal does requier pipe which is simlar to the grades used for pipelines.
It would requier speacal grades of plastic pipe, not pvc, to meet the pressure and flexablity requirments of a pipeline. Most patrolume, refined or crude, well eat away at the pipelines and pumps. Read More …
Filed in: Pipelines, Bio-fuel, Alternative Energy, Renewable Fuel, Ethanol
Is the use of ethanol as an alternative fuel a corrosive pipe dream? It could be thanks to ethanol’s widely unknown dirty little secret. The infrastructure for transporting oil or fuel is through the use of metal pipelines, tanker truck or railway tanker. But there’s just one slight problem. High concentrations of ethanol are corrosive to the metal pipelines. When you stop to think about it, that’s actually a major problem.
A smooth transition to ethanol seems highly unlikely since ethanol has a water affinity problem. That is, it absorbs water. Ethanol corrosion in metal pipes can lead to internal stress cracking and can accelerate damage to weld joints.
The damage can be extremely difficult to detect and very costly to repair. Due to ethanol’s corrosive characteristics, production may not be able to meet ethanol demand soon enough.
The U.S. may have large supplies of corn or biomass to convert to ethanol, but without using pipelines, how will the massive quantities of ethanol be transported to gas stations and the end consumer? In the short term, the transportation of ethanol will be handled by railway or tanker truck. But in the long term, a whole new infrastructure of pipelines may need to be built to transport ethanol. That’s not going to happen over night and it will certainly add to the costs of using ethanol as an alternative fuel.
So is ethanol corrosive to PVC pipe? If not, maybe we could line up the Plumbers Guild, give them a ton of PVC pipe and doping compound. They could construct another pipeline along top or side the existing pipelines in a matter of days. Is this ridiculous and far fetched? Of course. But it’s strange ideas like this that may lead to a solution. We could construct the world’s first “Moonshine Pipeline” to transport the ethanol right along side the oil.
Filed in: Pipelines, Alternative Energy, Renewable Fuel, Ethanol
Louisiana claims that requiring ethanol to be added to gasoline there would increase gas prices there because of shortage of corn based ethanol. Couldn’t they just produce ethanol from sugarcane like Brazil does on a much larger scale?
http://www.knoe.com/fullstory.php?id=1683
Filed in: Alternative Energy, Renewable Fuel, Ethanol