German Audi A3 diesel owned by a friend has particle trap. Computer raises 
exhaust temp to some incredible level every so many hours and burns the 
particulates off, then back to normal. So the particle problem appears to have 
been solved, in Germany anyway.
 
 Not clear how Corning filter reduces NOx.
 
 Oil industry analyst wrote the Washington Post not long ago to say that the 
push toward diesel autos is a problem because there is no excess refining 
capacity in the US, so diesel will become more expensive than gas for the 
foreseeable future if more and more autos go that route. Can't recall if this 
letter got posted to the list or not.
 
 Karl in DC
 
Christopher McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:  The Sweet Smell of Diesel   
  Written by Justice Litle
Edited by Eric Fry
    More than a century has passed since Ransom Eli Olds 
introduced the first mass-production vehicle, the Curved 
Dash Oldsmobile, in 1901. (Ford was hot on his heels.) A 
hundred years later, developments in automotive technology 
have not slowed down. 
    Electronic gadgets may capture most of the "Ooohs" and 
"Ahhhs" at auto shows, but these modern marvels are of 
small consequence compared to what's happening under the 
hood...and inside the tailpipe. Corning Inc. – the "fiber 
optic company" – has developed an exhaust-filtration 
technology that could dramatically boost demand for diesel-
powered vehicles. This is a long-term play on an exciting, 
and perhaps inevitable, development in the automotive 
world.
    Even without Corning's innovative exhaust filter, diesel is 
superior to conventional gasoline in two key respects: It 
releases 15-20% less (CO2) per mile driven than regular 
gasoline and gets about 30% more miles to the gallon. These 
advantages were long hidden by a few nasty drawbacks. The 
diesel engines of old were loud, dirty and smelly. You 
could hear a diesel truck coming from a quarter mile away, 
see the soot half a block away and smell the exhaust as it 
rolled past. But after years of research and refinement, 
the vast majority of diesel's problems have been licked. 
European refineries have long since removed the sulfur from 
their diesel production, allowing for a sharp reduction in 
smell and smoke. And the rising price of gasoline has made 
fuel efficiency all the more important, offsetting the 
extra cost of building a diesel engine. 
    These elements give diesel an edge in capturing global 
market share. But diesel also benefits from a much bigger, 
and potentially decisive, factor: the existence of 
petroleum alternatives. As it turns out, you don't need 
crude oil to make diesel. You can make it from coal, plant 
mass, cooking oil or even spare turkey parts (a small 
refinery in Missouri turns gobblers into fuel, cranking out 
hundreds of barrels per day). Biodiesel has taken off in 
Europe: Germany is in the lead, raising output 40-50% a 
year. Drivers love biodiesel, because it saves them money 
at the pump; governments love biodiesel because it offers 
justification - partial at least - for the countless 
billions gone to farm subsidies. It seems diesel can be 
made from just about anything with semi-organic origins. If 
you run a restaurant or a cafeteria, you may be tempted to 
invest in a cooking oil converter kit; this handy kit lets 
you deep fry a batch of potatoes and later reuse the oil in 
your delivery truck. 
    All well and good. But the final hurdle for diesel 
dominance can be summed up in a three-letter word: "NOx." 
Short for nitrous oxide, NOx is one of the soot-causing 
pollutants emitted by diesel engines. While engineers have 
figured out how to thoroughly "scrub" diesel exhaust 
through the use of catalytic converters and particle traps, 
getting out the last bit of NOx has been tricky. In 
embracing diesel so many years ago, Europe chose to make a 
tradeoff - accepting the downside of NOx-type particulates 
in exchange for lower CO2 emissions and greater fuel 
efficiency. Now both continents face a challenge: the high 
hurdle of tightened emissions regulations. "By 2007, the 
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will require a 90% 
reduction in the amount of soot," Forbes reports. "Between 
2007 and 2010 the agency also mandates a phased 92% 
reduction in the amount of NOx emitted from a truck's 
tailpipe." Europe has committed itself to a similar 
mandate. 
    The American trucking industry, which depends on diesel, is 
in a tizzy. A 92% NOx reduction is no small thing, and 
yesterday's pollution technology is not quite up to snuff. 
Tailpipes must be upgraded; the entire trucking industry 
must find a way to comply by the EPA deadline. This is 
where opportunity comes into focus...He who slays the NOx 
dragon wins the fair maiden's hand: the lucrative exhaust-
filtration market. Corning – to continue the metaphor – may 
be the lucky knight-in-shining armor.
    This 150-year-old company has enjoyed a long history of 
maverick innovation. Its intense focus on research and 
development, combined with a willingness to take risks on 
new ideas, is woven into the fabric of the company. In 
testament to its research prowess, the town of Corning, 
N.Y., challenges Los Alamos, N.M., for the highest number 
of Ph.D.s per capita in the world. (Sometimes that's a good 
thing). From the mundane to the exotic, Corning is widely 
known for its glass products. The company has done 
groundbreaking work in everything from light bulbs, Pyrex 
dishes and test tube beakers to space shuttle windows, 
missile nose cones and spy satellites. 
    Although most folks know Corning as the leading pioneer of 
fiber optic technology, the company has also pioneered 
environmental technologies. More than three decades ago, 
Corning introduced the honeycomb-type material at the heart 
of catalytic converters. Now, this innovative company is 
preparing to take the automotive world by storm yet again.
    Corning sold off its conventional glassware business in the 
late 1990s to make way for a major research and development 
push. As part of that effort, Corning focused on diesel-
exhaust technology. The company's researchers saw the 
inevitability of tightening environmental regulations and 
felt they could come up with far superior exhaust-
filtration solutions in comparison to what currently 
existed. So Corning's management decided to take a risk and 
invest close to half a billion dollars in a new factory and 
new materials research, even as the bursting dot-com and 
telecom bubbles were savaging company's core fiber-optics 
business.
    The big bet looks like it will soon begin to pay off. 
Thanks to up-and-coming regulations, diesel tailpipes are 
projected to be a billion-dollar market by 2008 - a more-
than-80-fold increase from the year Corning first took the 
plunge. And that is only the beginning: As diesel 
technology takes hold in the developing world, the tailpipe 
growth curve will rapidly accelerate.
    Corning dominated fiber optics through a relentless 
combination of smarts, guts and know-how. The company has 
also performed under pressure in the past, developing the 
catalytic converter in response to a new era of emission 
regulations. The goal is to do the same thing here in 2006, 
creating a particulate filter that is simultaneously more 
efficient, more durable and less expensive than the 
competition's. The material Corning has selected for its 
next-generation filter - aluminum titanate - is the result 
of more than two years of intense research. The firm is 
taking risks and leaping ahead while competitors stick to 
the status quo. Between technological savvy, early-stage 
initiative and already recorded progress, Corning has a 
strong shot at dominating this lucrative new market space. 
    At the moment, the bulk of Corning's profits comes from LCD 
screens and flat panels; Corning is seen as the fiber 
optics company that "also" does environmental technology. 
With the growth of diesel in the coming years, Corning 
might eventually become the environmental technology 
company that "also" does flat panels and fiber optics.
    [Joel's Note:   It might be time you blew the smoke off your 
portfolio and added Justice's pollution-free, financial 
newsletter to your investment strategy. Learn more about 
why Justice believes diesel is going to play an 
increasingly important role by reading this special report 
on the coming petroleum crisis. 
    The coming petroleum apocalypse – what you need to know:
http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/OST/EOSTFC25/   
  


Christopher McCann, Squier Park, Kansas City, Missouri
-2005 Blue Point Siamese, "Rose"
-1987 300TD, 151K, "Rotkäppchen"
-1985 300SD, 210K, "Wulf" 
-1976 240D, ?K, "AKP-Wagen" (Alternativen Kraftstoffs Prüfenlastwagen)
-1972 Jacobsen 21" Turbo Vent
-1971 Case 222 Hydrive, 12HP Kohler, 38" deck, Snowcaster, "One Banger"
  
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