Very good point to be made. The materials necessary to process WVO into
Biodiesel immediately make your garage a HAZMAT site and make you subject
to all EPA and Air Quality ordinances. Methanol is a VOC, Level 1, Caustic
Soda is deadly and requires special handling [lye, common name] So it also
Just don't talk about it on your cell phone or the webbernets. BigSis is
watching.
--R
On 6/9/13 11:15 AM, G Mann wrote:
Very good point to be made. The materials necessary to process WVO into
Biodiesel immediately make your garage a HAZMAT site and make you subject
to all EPA and Air
Biggest risk I see is equipment failure causing fire. I am willing to
admit that I am not scientist enough to make biodiesel of a consistant
quality.
Fitering wvo is the lazier way I think.
Mike
On Jun 8, 2013 11:45 PM, Benz Hogs benz-n-h...@gulseth.net wrote:
BULL FECES! It's only not safe
Here is one view of biodiesel processing on the 'net:
.the biodiesel industry and the technology have evolved. With the
professionally engineered biodiesel systems available today, the process is
simpler, safer, takes less time and yields more consistent results. So I
decided to try one of
that chart (if it's even accurate) seems to pretty well show one of the
problems with using xVO as fuel, but certainly not all of them. seems
pretty typical of the incomplete information and unrelated conclusions
i've seen from some WVO system vendor/manufacturers.
it's a good thing you
ernest breakfield wrote:
that chart (if it's even accurate) seems to pretty well show one of the
problems with using xVO as fuel, but certainly not all of them. seems
pretty typical of the incomplete information and unrelated conclusions
i've seen from some WVO system vendor/manufacturers.
Processing oil into biodiesel is much more dangerous and not something I would
do my attached garage.
Michael E. Esh
231-286-2344
On Jun 8, 2013, at 2:38 PM, Mitch Haley m...@voyager.net wrote:
ernest breakfield wrote:
that chart (if it's even accurate) seems to pretty well show one of the
The car is in the shop. It should ready on Monday or Tuesday. Hoping for the
best.
Michael E. Esh
231-286-2344
On Jun 7, 2013, at 6:36 PM, Mitch Haley m...@voyager.net wrote:
Benz Hogs wrote:
Virgin VO (VVO) has to be heated to 260F or higher to approach the viscosity
of diesel. See
Only the methanol is dangerous. Distill your own ethanol and the
danger goes away. You can pick up fruit and veggies to ferment from
the same restaurants.
Processing oil into biodiesel is much more dangerous and not
something I would do my attached garage.
Michael E. Esh
231-286-2344
BULL FECES! It's only not safe if you're ignorant or don't respect
methanol and lye as the chemicals they are.
Luther KB5QHUForest Park, IL
'98 ML320 Max (16,xxx mi)
On 6/8/2013 7:43 PM, Mike Esh wrote:
Processing oil into biodiesel is much more dangerous and not something I would
do
On Jun 6, 2013, at 9:00 PM, Michael Esh michael...@mac.com wrote:
I enjoy collecting and using WVO in my Mercedes.
And how do you get the oil that you use?
Rick
Sent from my iPhone
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
For new and used parts go to www.okiebenz.com
...@okiebenz.com] On Behalf Of Michael Esh
Sent: Thursday, June 06, 2013 10:00 PM
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Subject: Re: [MBZ] SVO and IP issues was RE: 1984 300D - won't start when hot.
http://www.frybrid.com/svo.htm
I have included a link to an explanation and graph of vegetable oil and diesel
Virgin VO (VVO) has to be heated to 260F or higher to approach the
viscosity of diesel. See the bell curve chart here:
http://bunkum.us/svo/viscosity.html Biodiesel is the ONLY way to go.
Luther KB5QHUForest Park, IL
'98 ML320 Max (166,xxx mi)
On 5/29/2013 8:34 AM, Smith, Todd wrote:
Their chart is not matched anywhere else in the industry. It's all
marketing hype. Use Google to find the industry research that proves
Frybrid wrong.
Luther KB5QHUForest Park, IL
'98 ML320 Max (166,xxx mi)
On 6/6/2013 9:00 PM, Michael Esh wrote:
http://www.frybrid.com/svo.htm
I
Benz Hogs wrote:
Virgin VO (VVO) has to be heated to 260F or higher to approach the
viscosity of diesel. See the bell curve chart here:
http://bunkum.us/svo/viscosity.html Biodiesel is the ONLY way to go.
The graph Mike Esh linked earlier seemed to say that SVO (of unnamed variety) at
160°
http://www.frybrid.com/svo.htm
I have included a link to an explanation and graph of vegetable oil and diesel
viscosity. Frybrid is the company from which I purchased my WVO system. The
only item I have replaced is the temperature sensor that sends the signal to
the controller that initiates
Mitch,
I am interested in the injection pump. My mechanic would like it to be as close
to my existing pump as possible.
How do I determine what pump I have on my car and what pump you have. I cannot
see number on the pump I have. Would the VIN or Number Plate located under the
hood near the
On May 29, 2013 8:54 AM, Michael Canfield slozuk...@gmail.com wrote:
Rather economically feasible with an
old Benz. Whole cars with working
pumps are usually under a grand
around here. Doesn't take long to
add up
$1000 worth of fuel @ four bucks a
gallon.
You are making the
Mike Esh wrote:
Mitch,
I am interested in the injection pump. My mechanic would like it to be as close to my existing pump as possible.
How do I determine what pump I have on my car and what pump you have. I cannot see number on the pump I have. Would the VIN or Number Plate located under the
I agree that SVO viscosity is a critical element in accelerated wear of the
IP. While our natural tendency is to look for only one damage factor, in
this case, I believe the additive effect of all elements work to decrease
the useful service life of the IP.
I am active on another diesel only
...@okiebenz.com] On Behalf Of G Mann
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 11:24 AM
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Subject: Re: [MBZ] SVO and IP issues was RE: 1984 300D - won't start when hot.
I agree that SVO viscosity is a critical element in accelerated wear of the IP.
While our natural tendency is to look
Rather economically feasible with an old Benz. Whole cars with working
pumps are usually under a grand around here. Doesn't take long to add up
$1000 worth of fuel @ four bucks a gallon.
Mike
On May 29, 2013 11:24 AM, G Mann g2ma...@gmail.com wrote:
I agree that SVO viscosity is a critical
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