Dear Pete and all

I'llrepeat the composition of "standard producer gas" to get it on the books. 
H2,19; CO, 21; CH4 5; N2  52; misc 3 volume % dry basis.   I have been dealing 
with PG for 40 years, and it doesn't vary much from this provided the fuel has 
< 20% H2O.

You can find lots more information in our books at www.WoodGas.com

Tom Reed

Dr Thomas B Reed
President, The Biomass Energy Foundation
www.Woodgas.com

On Jan 27, 2011, at 11:26 AM, Pete&Sheri <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> 
> This topic sure has taken up a lot of time.  Why not just fix it if y'all 
> don't like it the way it is?
>  Earlier I suggested that the analysis of this mystery gas might fit into 
> some numbering system, as is done with steel.
> It seems to me that this group is the right one to do it.
> One could at least deal with the top half dozen components, couldn't one?
> 
> Again, back to the steel analogy--- we don't have any problems talking about 
> A36, 1018, W1, etc..
> 
> Maybe, a letter for the top component?
> Maybe a 2 tier system,; one for those gases with N2 and one for those without?
> 
> Maybe someone could at least tell me why this shouldn't be done now?
> 
> Pete Stanaitis
> --------------
> 
> 
> 
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