Prof.Lloyd:

   I agree that combustion efficiency is hugely important.  I would love to see 
it reported separately  (and could be theoretically, I think as CO is already 
measured and reported). 
   I would love to see excess air reported (and I think that possible also).  
   I would love to see more on the oxygen content of various woods (air to fuel 
ratios for combustion are given as 4-7. If you are making char, the range is 
probably wider, as lignin, cellulose and hemicellulose all have rather 
different O2 content, and contribute differently to char.  
   Why not separately also report on the H2 content of all the fuels, and it 
also has a small content in chars.  Then we can move to sulfur.
   Why not report the lost radiant energy?

   If you had all this in an expanded WBT procedure  (with all Crispin and you 
want about each and every fuel), what would the average user of Jim Jetter's 
test do differently than they are now doing?  I just continue to see these as 
useful academic exercises that don't advance stove development.

  I nit pick below a  bit more.


On Aug 21, 2013, at 12:06 AM, "Philip Lloyd" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear List
> 
> In one of his responses to Crispin, Ron said "RWL:  In summary, I think you
> are raising issues that are hopelessly complicated for the world of stove
> testing and comparisons.  I see insufficient reason so far to explore your
> metric words "possible" and "to check" and "Obviously".   I hope you will
> try again to convince this list (with citations), if you disagree."
> 
> I think stove testing needs to be comparable between both stoves and fuels.
     [RWL:  I think this is now being done.  Each fuel seems to have enough 
known about it and it is reported.  The unused CO is reported.   I don't know 
this for sure,  but think that the same stove with different fuels gives very 
comparable results - and especially in a tier-ranking sense.  (Anyone have data 
on this last point?)

> What Crispin has done is bring standard combustion theory to bear on the
> question so as to allow this.
     [RWL:  Jetter's work is about improving the performance via measurement.  
Details about each fuel doesn't seem as important as reporting the fuel 
combustion efficiency - which is (sort of) in the data.  (meaning high CO means 
low combustion efficiency).
    I am not sure that any important aspect of combustion theory is missing.  
If so - exactly what?

> I need, for instance, to be able to compare a
> single stove burning either wood or charcoal.  
    [RWL:  I hope not too often. Rarely will the same stove be the right thing 
to use for both fuels.

> I have to be able to take the
> oxygen present in the cellulose and other constituents of the wood into
> account in calculating the excess air, because it contributes to the
> combustion, whereas with charcoal there is essentially no oxygen present in
> the fuel.  
   [RWL:  Maybe this is important for something you are doing, but why impose 
this on all stove testing?  I think we should concentrate first on getting 
excess air measured accurately, not on the percentage coming from the fuel 
(which can mostly be determined from the literature - no need I see to encumber 
each test with that level of detail).  The operation and performance of 
charcoal-making and charcoal-using stoves is so different (even ignoring how 
the char in a char-using stove was produced), that I think the O2 content of 
the fuel is in the noise.  Can you give a counter example?

> The difference is real, measurable, and has an impact on the
> efficiency of combustion.
   [RWL:  Yes to all - but I don't think it needed as a new adjunct to the WBT. 
 On the best stoves  (tiny CO emitted) , the information will change the second 
or third significant efficiency digit, and I am still worried about the first 
digit.
> 
> I, for one, am convinced.
    [RWL:  I will be when I see a written justification for holding up progress 
on getting an agreed ISO standard.   How about helping me get char production ( 
a first digit issue) as an accepted part of the standard?

   Need to repeat, some of the above might have been covered in yesterday's 
webinar which had  to be cancelled due to an equipment glitch.   Ron
>   
> 
> 
> 
> 
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