As it was rather elaborate, I did take the liberty to <snip> a bit...

 

Hi Dick,

Thanks for explaining you process.

So far we learned it is batch, one stage only.

And you are outspoken against quality testing.....

 

Well, thanks, now me and everybody familiar with the properties of the actual transesterification reaction know what they need to know.

 

As I am really couriouse, please give us an idea on the capacity and the price range of your plants.

[hope others on the list don’t mind?]

 

And what do you think about product liability? I mean for you as a technology provider? Hope everything will allways turn out well for you in this respect.

 

Camillo Holecek

 

 

-----UrsprŸngliche Nachricht-----
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Im Auftrag von Dick Carlstein
Gesendet: Dienstag, 07. August 2001 23:37
An: biofuels-biz
Betreff: [biofuels-biz] wvo

 

in answer to:

 

To: biofuels-biz@yahoogroups.com

Sent: Monday, August 06, 2001 9:15 AM

Subject: Re: [biofuels-biz] fuzzy standards

 

The reason why Dick sneers at WVO is, it seems, because he hasn't (like
ourselves) used the right recipe for using heavily used WVO. Is this true?

 

no, paddy, not at all. the reason i shy away from heavily used wvo, is that a) it's a very variable feedstock, quality wise, b) it is expensive (in most parts of the world), for what you get (in argentina it goes for u$s 0.20 a litre, in spain for 0.21), c) it is a rigid supply scenario feedstock, and d) it is more expensive, complicated, and time consuming to transesterify satisfactorily.

<snip...> 

 



Biofuels at Journey to Forever
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
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http://www.webconx.com/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
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