"Dirty fuel" ... does that include woody biomass fuels that so many makers of 
so many improved cookstoves have promoted for so many years, that directly 
kills 4 million people every year?
 
The other Otto 




Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2013 17:52:05 -0800
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Jatropha fruit as fuel?

Dear Otto,


I would think that especially with potentially dirty fuels (or any pellet using 
different components) gasifiers need to be engineered to burn cleanly and I 
agree that stoves need to be tested to determine emissions. Have you ever 
noticed that sometimes gasifiers do better with some moisture in the fuel? I 
find that really dry fuel can burn too quickly and make excess smoke and gas.


All Best,


Dean


On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 2:23 PM, Otto Formo <[email protected]> wrote:



Dear stovers,


I would guess that "any" gasifier will burn jatropha seeds or pellets cleanly 
and efficient, as long as the moisture content are less than 10%.


We have in the pipeline to test a new design of natural draft gasifiers, using 
jatropha seeds and pellets, for emmissions and toxcic fumes.


We should be very carefull adviceing people using these types of fuel, before 
it has been carefully tested by independent institutions.


Have a nice weekend.


Otto (not the famous one..........:)





From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2013 10:19:11 -0500
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Jatropha fruit as fuel?



Dear Jonathan
 
I am interested in the general layout and dimensions of a stove that will burn 
the seeds well. Are you sharing at this time anything regarding the design?
 
Thanks
Crispin


++++++++
 

Dear Joyce and stovers all,
 
My regrets for not responding to this request 6 months ago.  I admit that it 
got lost in my messy inbox which I have now reduced from 6000 messages to a 
mere 2400, and in the process uncovered Joyce's email.
 
Burning Jatropha seeds whole or in briquettes in open cooking arrangements is a 
bad idea.  It produces a smoky, smelly fire and probably exposes cooks to toxic 
emissions.  I even question burning Jatropha oil in lamps in enclosed areas for 
the same reason. Maybe others know of emissions studies.
[snip]
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