Doug,
When you have your details gathered and made available, I will try to
get one made in Illinois by some DIY friends. Then test it and get
some confirmation of your experiences. I hope others do that also.
Then soon we could get it into some villages in developing societies for
the ultimate testing.
Paul
Doc / Dr TLUD / Prof. Paul S. Anderson, PhD
Email: psand...@ilstu.edu
Skype: paultlud Phone: +1-309-452-7072
Website: www.drtlud.com
On 1/17/2014 1:34 AM, Doug wrote:
Hi Jeff, Paul, and Colleagues,
Since I posted the first stage of making and testing this innovative little
concept of making cooking stove fuel and even gasifier fuel, I have found it
necessary to add another little moving part to keep blade slot clear of chips.
After a cutting a few full lengths, the slot packed very tightly, so a simple
lever just pulls a pivoting flat bar upwards and ejects the plug.
I found that it cuts our native hardwoodâEUR^(TM)s easily, and also bamboo
which shatters into separate bits as the hollow centre allows the tube to
crush, then cut cleanly. Compared to using a machete or hatchet to cut these
smaller branches/cane stems/reeds/shrubs etc., all the bits drop out without
flying all over the place needing to be picked up. I will probably be making a
few angle brackets from the base angle mounts to mount a sheet metal trough on
each side of the blade.
In regards to the force required to make a cut, it is similar to cutting say
3mm steel in a hand guillotine. Surprisingly, I found some woods cut better at
right angles with less force, so have a few new things to learn about how wood
chip cuts in ways that we like. The nice chunky round chips also displayed very
little laminar displacement of the grain, which results in lots of chip just
falling apart. This might be OK for stoves, but not gasifiers.
Another interesting factor that resulted by hand grinding the cutting disc, is
the the grinding disc left a fine serration to the blade edge, making it look
like a micro tooth saw, rather than a knife edge. It works rather well, so easy
to resharpen in most rural workshops. The thought of a ground blade isn't a low
tech solution! Also added was a blade stop, bolted to one of the blade holes
to stop the blade crunching down onto the chip clearing blade.
Finally, a coat of paint in "Fluidyne Red and Black", should inspire any DIY
who needs one. I will show the whole project on the Fluidyne Archive once I assemble a
few more photos of the fuel cutting detail.
Doug Williams,
Fluidyne.
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