Simply very informative at one place. Thanks for compilation

-KrishnaFrom: CHRISTA ROTH <[email protected]>Sent: Wed, 12 Oct 
2011 18:09:21 To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves 
<[email protected]>Subject: Re: [Stoves] burning rice 
huskThe best rice-husk burning stoves I know of are the ones based on the 
tremendous work of Alexis Belonio. Paul Olivier' s work in Vietnam has taken 
rice-husk burning stoves in the household-size range to another level, 
uncomparable with natural-draft stoves like the Mayon Turbo, LoTrau or 
whichever. Paul has generously shared a lot of his work on this list in the 
last days, so you can look more details up from the links provided there or 
consult the section on rice-husk burning gasifiers, pages 43-48 
of  the 
manual microgasification http://www.gtz.de/de/dokumente/giz2011-en-micro-gasification.pdf, 

it contains all I found as per last year. If anybody knows of models that are 
not included there, please let me know, so that they can be included in the 
next update. 

regards

christa







Am 12.10.2011 um 12:18 schrieb George Riegg Gambia:



Correct me if I am wrong but I am under the impression that Roger Sampson's 
Mayon Turbo Stove is designed to do just this kind of job?CheersGeorge from the 
jungle----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]>To: 
<[email protected]>Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 12:08 
PMSubject: [Stoves] burning rice husk

Dear Crispin,



------------ Original Message ----------------







Message: 7



Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2011 00:13:43 -0400



From: "Crispin Pemberton-Pigott" <[email protected]>



To: "'Discussion of biomass cooking stoves'"



<[email protected]>



Subject: Re: [Stoves] High mass space heating options Re: Rocket Stove



for the PLACE



Message-ID: <[email protected]>



Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"







Dear Paul











I find you report encouraging. People already see the value of making a high



energy fuel from a pretty lousy biomass, and it is only a short step to



using the gas as well for any of a variety of purposes. I am inclined to



think that a large scale process heat application will give a better quality



or at least consistent product.











Is there a missing technology: a stove that burns the whole rice hull



instead of making char? Perhaps as a slightly compressed block or cylinder



whole rice hull could be made attractive, clean and efficient in the correct



device.



I do not know whether a stove can efficiently burn rice husk.



But it seems rice husk can be burnt efficiently in FBC ( fluidised bed 
combustion ) boilers. There are several medium sized FBC boilers operated all 
over India. So the fuel need not go waste.



Regards,





Rajan _______________________________________________Stoves mailing listto Send 
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