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Backbone >
Life in the Balance
The Drive to Lower Emissions Part III
By Susan Piperato

For the past two issues, this column has focused on
the race to get sustainable vehiclesor ZEV, for zero emissions vehicleson
the road. This month, we cross the finish line of this series with a look
at biodiesel and a man who's, literally, taken this fuel to the highway.
Joshua Tickell started experimenting with making biodiesel back in the
1996, before the term had even entered the American sustainability lexicon.
Because there wasn't any fuel shortage crisis motivating him, Tickell
writes in the preface to his book, From the Fryer to the Fuel Tank: The
Complete Guide to Using Vegetable Oil as an Alternative Fuel (Tickell
Energy Consulting, third edition 2000), his family and friends were somewhat
mystified by his newfound obsession with vegetable oil, especially in
relationship to running his motor home. But, like many innovators, Tickell
felt compelled to continue hitting up local restaurants for their leftover
cooking oil despite his own occasional bouts of skepticism. When he decided
he'd found the right formula for making biodiesel, he filled up the tank
of his motor home with the stuff, and left his hometown of Tallahassee,
Florida, to head west on a kind of crusade. In the summer and fall of
1998, he took the van on an official and much publicized national tour.
The Veggie Van was featured on Jim Hightower Radio, CNN, "The Today
Show," The Discovery Channel and "Dateline", as well as
in several major newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times.
Although Tickell says he fully expected his newly dubbed Veggie Van to
pack it in at any moment, it never did. Since the van's maiden voyage,
he has crossed the country in the van via biodiesel fuel several timesin
fact, as of 2000, the Veggie Van had traveled more than 25,000 powered
by biodiesel, without ever having a single fuel-related engine problem.
Any diesel engine whatsoever can run on biodieseltrucks, generators,
boats, tractors, trains, busses, and cars. As long as the engine is diesel,
that is. You can even mix biodiesel and diesel fuel at any ratio, so there's
no need to drain the system before filling up with the alternative stuff.
However, attempting to use biodiesel in a car that normally runs on leaded
or unleaded gasoline is another story. Gasoline-run vehicles have spark-ignition
enginesin other words, spark plugs are used to ignite thin explosive
fuels like gasoline. Diesel engines are compression-ignition engines,
substantially heavier and sturdier, designed to run on thick viscous fuels
that are ignited using super-compressed air instead of spark plugs. Vegetable
oil-derived biodiesel, which is a thick form of grease, says Tickell,
is ideal. But don't try putting the grease directly into a diesel engine
without processing it into biodiesel fuel. Although some diesel engines
will run on straight grease in a pinch, he explains, most aren't designed
for straight vegetable oil and can "coke" up and stop working
altogether. However, there are some simple ways to modify your engine's
fuel system to make it accommodate straight vegetable oilwhether
fresh or used. Tickell's book includes complete instructions.
Since biodiesel doesn't contain sulfur, there are no sulfur dioxide emissions.
Soot emissions are generally cut by up to 60 percent, as are carbon monoxide
and hydrocarbon emissions. However, cars running on biodiesel still emit
the same amount of carbon dioxide as with diesel. But the CO2 from burning
biodiesel is captured in the next batch of crops grown to make it, Tickell
claims. Then it is "emitted and captured again and again, ad infinitum."
He explains: "The key here is that no new carbon dioxide is added
to the Earth's atmosphere. We're not digging up fossilized carbon and
dumping it into the sky. Instead, we're just cycling carbon and oxygen
through the ecosystem. This is why biodiesel is called a renewable fuel."
Biodiesel doesn't have any effect on nitrous oxide emissions, either.
In fact, according to Tickell, there are no less Nox emissions than there
are with gasoline-run engines, but cutting back on Nox emissions can be
done by lowering the combustion temperature.
Here's the good news: biodiesel gets an average of 25mpg, and in US and
European tests, engines running on biodiesel have shown minor, if any,
differences in torque, horse power, range and top speed. Biodiesel also
ensures a smoother acceleration and idling. Maintenance costs are no higher
than with diesel fuel. University of Missouri studies of biodiesel usage
show that it is more lubricating and therefore can prolong engine life.
It does contain trace amounts of methanol alcohol, which degrades rubber;
however, after 25,000 miles on the road with the Veggie Van, Tickell has
never had to replace any rubber fuel system parts.
Making Biodiesel
In Germany, biodiesel made from rapid-growing, naturally occurring strain
algae supplies 800 service stations across the country. Tickell says that
any type of vegetable oil or animal fat (hmmmm
blubber?) can be used
to make biodiesel. But here's the real sustainability plug for using cooking
oil: There are more than three billion gallons of used cooking oil produced
in the US each year, most of it illegally dumped in sewer systems or trucked
to landfills. Some of it is refiltered and then sold to Third World countries
as cooking oil, which, needless to say, causes major health problems.
In some regions back home, the stuff is reused in cattle feed, pet food,
and cosmeticswhich means we may eat it ourselves, feed it to our
dogs, or rub it into our faces.
Tickell says making biodiesel is so easy you can even do it in your kitchen
blender, but he recommends using a bucket, metal drum, or plastic tank.
The process is technically known as transesterification, and was conducted
as early as 1853 by scientists Duffy and Patrick. A 1991 University of
Idaho Department of Agriculture report describes the process of transesterification
as one of "using an alcohol (e.g., methanol or ethanol) in the presence
of a catalyst, such as sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide, to chemically
break the molecule of the raw renewable oil into methyl or ethyl esters
of the renewable oil with glycerol as a by-product."
One early use of transesterified vegetable oil was in powering heavy-duty
vehicles in South Africa in the 1920s. Today, Europe is much further ahead
in its production and use of biodiesel than the US. At Poland's Institute
of Aviation, in Warsaw, a biodiesel degree program has been running since
1991. One of the latest experiments includes running cars on pure rape
seed methyl ester, and building the first agrorafinery, or biodiesel factory,
capable of producing 1,000 tonnes of biodiesel per year. In cooperation
with Polish fuel company CPN, the Institute sells a mixture of diesel
and biodiesel at seven filling stations.
The most important part of transesterification is obtaining large quantities
of vegetable oil. Tickell says most restaurants have contracts with grease
recyclers, but if you work the deal out on their terms, they'll usually
be glad to give it to you rather than pay to have it removed. That goes
for chain restaurants as well as independently owned ones. Also, don't
worry about the oil "going bad" after you store it for processingthat
can only happen during a particularly hot summer. Under extremely high
temperatures it can form black algae, which is difficult to clean. It's
best to make biodiesel right away, but if you can't, then store the oil
in a cool, shady spot and use a black drum. Don't let any water get inside.
It takes about 10 hours to make biodieselone hour for the reaction
to take place, one hour for preparation, mixing and cleanup, and eight
hours for the mixture to sit. It's a relatively simple process, and well
worth ita gallon of homemade fuel costs only about 50 cents, Tickell
says, compared to $1.30 for commercially produced fuel.
When making biodiesel, observe safety precautions: wear eye protection,
long sleeves, gloves, shoes, and keep a designated eye wash nearby. Remember,
this is chemistry. You'll be working with a mixture of vegetable oil or
animal fat, methanol and lye. Tickell recommends using methanol alcohol,
bought at racetracks, and Red Devil Lye, available in supermarkets and
hardware stores. And remember this: Do not blend vegetable oil with gasoline
instead of methanol.
Despite the (slight) risks involved in making biodiesel, it has a rather
benign and useful byproduct: glycerol, which makes glycerin soap. Tickell
recommends using it to clean the biodiesel processor, or pouring it into
jars to use at home.
Tickell's "Green Grease Machine," invented as part of a college
science project, is a portable biodiesel processor that produces non-toxic
biodegradable diesel-like fuel from vegetable oil. The machine is designed
to recycle restaurant cooking oilincluding soy, sunflower, canola,
vegetable and fast-food, French-fryer oiland process it into clean
biodiesel. It's built from a Yanmar diesel motor, a belt-driven 4kW generator,
an old Champion juicer mounted to a heavy-duty rotary gear pump, a fryer
vat, a blue tugboat fuel filter, a drill, a mud mixer mounted over a sealed
5-gallon bucket, a 60-gallon steam kettle (Tickell's is a 1978 military
issue), and a three-horsepower DC outboard motor. Instructions for making
the machine and directions for how its use are available online or in
Tickell's book. Although the Green Machine sounds like a tricky contraption,
the online diagrams and instructions for building it make it seem like
a surprisingly straightforward project.
Biodiesel Workshops
Joshua Tickell offers hands-on workshops in making biodiesel fuel and
a biodiesel processor. Costs range from $125 for a one-day workshop to
$500 a five-day seminar. For information on the next workshop dates, check
the Veggie Van Web site at www.veggievan.com, or e-mail tickell@veggievan.com.
BY THE WAY...
If you can't afford to buy or make your own sustainable, emission-free
vehicle, don't despair-you can still make tracks toward sustainable driving.
There are already cost-effective and reliable methods available to reduce
emission levels, increase mileage and extend the life of your engine.
Here's one:
The MaxImizer Magnetizer
The magnet is claimed to elevate moods, relieve pain, cure arthritis
and improve overall health. Now it's being marketed for "car therapy,"
according to Tom Weber, AKA "The Magnet Man," promoter of the
MaxImizer Magnetizer. Using mono-pole technology, the MaxImizer increases
mileage and power and lowers emission rates, maintenance and fuel costs.
Although the MaxImizer's Web site presents it as a cost-saving and performance-improving
device, Weber claims several cars inspected without "anti-pollution
gear," but with the MaxImizer installed, have still passed emission
tests. The device is used by NASA and the El Paso Border Patrol, and has
garnered a California State approval number. One more claim to fame: Weber
said former "Gunsmoke" actor Dennis Weaver, who installed one
on his new 1995 Chevy Blazer, wrote to say "how clean and simple
it is to use, and how everybody should be using it."
The MaxImizer was invented in 1982 by Dr. Peter Kulish. "Basically,
he discovered that if you put a negatively charged magnet on the air intake
and radiator lines and two positively charged magnets on the fuel line,
then when the fuel enters the combustion chamber, it converts to 100 percent
octane," Weber explained. "There's no scale buildup in the engine
and your car starts easier and runs smoother. You save 10 to 20 percent
average in fuel costs, increase your horsepower by five to 10 percent,
and reduce carbon monoxide emissions by 50 to 95 percent and hydrocarbon
emissions by 83 percent."
In their natural state, Weber said, "both air and fuel carry a negative
charge. When they enter the combustion chamber of your engine, they repel
each other, allowing for the incomplete burn of fuel. [With the MaxImizer]
the air is reinforced with a stronger negative charge so that the burn
is enhanced to perform as stated. The MaxImizer reduces engine wear by
increasing combustion efficiency. This reduces the unburned hydrocarbons
blown by gasses that, through the pressure of combustion, get forced past
the pistons' rings and into the oil, contaminating it."
A MaxImizer Kit costs $90 and contains four magnetic units for gas-driven
cars (or three for diesel engines). Each magnet is backed by a plate that
bounces the magnetic force back and forth through the air, fuel and water,
in turn increasing the power of the force. Positive magnetic charge is
forced into the fuel and coolant and negative magnetic rays are forced
into the air, creating a "more complete burn," Weber said, "since
the air and fuel attract each other and the way they line up makes room
for more air to encompass the fuel."
According to Weber, "regardless of the type of fuel you now use,
you only need 85/87 octane" once the MaxImizer is installed-even
if your car's manual calls for premium fuel. "The first 1,000 miles
of driving cleans out the varnish and carbon in the fuel system,"
he explained. "No more need for any additives such as injector cleaners
the
spark plugs and valves are decarbonized, extending their life. After a
week to 10 days of driving, the scales in the radiator, engine block,
heater core and water pump will be dissolved completely."
Weber drives an aged Lincoln Continental, in which he installed a MaxImizer
16 years ago after hearing about Dr. Kulish's invention on a radio program
about Nicola Tesla. "I bought it for the auto I cherish. I wanted
to find out if it really worked. My Lincoln has made me money over so
many years of having the MaxImizer installed," he said. "My
Lincoln gave me nine to 12 mpg on 94 octane. Now I use 87 octane and get
16 to 19 mpg."
For more information, visit the MaxImizer's Web site at http://users.penn.com/~tomwflye/gas.htm.
To order, call (888) 883-6007 or write to Tom Weber at PO Box 165, Altoona,
PA 16603.
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