Hi Gasification Colleagues,

With tongue in cheek:

I do of course include Stove, Tera Preta, Biochar enthusiasts, and lurkers from 
all persuasions whom I have to say (me included) are dedicated to some aspect 
of improving things for the masses who couldn't care less of the issues we 
worry about!

Where do I start however to join in this very enlightening and useful 
discussion, without stomping on innovative thought and sensitive aspirations? I 
guess I can only share my own pathetic attempts to apply all this free 
knowledge in a way that it would work for me, so this morning as I used the 
pick axe to chop up the rock like soil, thinking of the tons of mulch, horse 
and cow dung, chicken litter, the lime, wood ash, fertilisers,etc, applied over 
30 years, I decided  to seed this bed with activated char from my gasifier to 
observe the difference. I'll report the results at the end of the Summer.

Being Summer holidays, I opened up the gasifier shed down the back of the 
block, to resume work on the waste charcoals exiting the gasifier, not 
specifically for any end application, but to learn more about the conditions 
that promote the formation of iron in a small fraction of the waste char, which 
are attracted to magnets. See Fluidyne Archive  www.fluidynenz.250x.com   

After spending a day sieving char from the stored chars at CalForests in June, 
I discovered that it is not found in great abundance just from wood 
gasification, and was advised to consider the bark and immediate layer under 
the bark as the most likely source of the iron. Gasifying bark has it's own 
problems apart from supply in my case, so my thoughts returned to the rapid 
growing coppice woods and possibly  woody stems of many invasive species. With 
the help of a mate doing most of the cutting up, I have coppice Poplar, and 
Privet hedging stems to gasify, with the hope that we can recover more than the 
57g of char with iron attached from 25kg of "normal" wood blocks.

It goes without saying, that my gasifier was left as it was last used in May, 
full of wood that was less than dry, resulting in saturated wet char in the 
lower oxidation bed, all the things that I tell people to avoid for the 
reliable operation of a gasifier! All I could do was get it alight and let it 
burn up like an incinerator with the lid open, perfect to watch the boiling 
smoke gases full of CO, filling the shed with what the books tell us is 
hazardous to our health. It stirred up the rats a bit, and after a good cough 
myself, ran it long enough to get rid of the old fuel in order to begin the new 
trials. That was yesterday, so might be able to offer some follow up in a week 
or so.

While we should never forget the health issues of our Black Art, it comes to 
mind that as a wee tot, I had my afternoon naps on a pile of coal tar soaked 
bags piled in the cab of my fathers truck. He delivered coal, and I was as 
black as he most of the time! As kids we followed the traction engines towing 
tar tanks and watched hot tar spray onto the roads, encouraged by our mothers 
to stand close and get a whiff as it was good for our chests! My 1940 
generation of friends are still all alive that shared this experience, so maybe 
this explains our interest in carbon and the gas that surrounds it becoming an 
addiction we just cannot ignore(:-)

More as it happens, but enjoy this time of the year as our environment allows.

Doug Williams,
Fluidyne----------


















_______________________________________________
Gasification mailing list

to Send a Message to the list, use the email address
[email protected]

to UNSUBSCRIBE or Change your List Settings use the web page
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/gasification_lists.bioenergylists.org

for more Gasifiers,  News and Information see our web site:
http://gasifiers.bioenergylists.org/

Reply via email to