Sunday, December 16, 2007

No Start!

My car won't start! We had a couple of really cold days a week and a half ago. My car started, though it took several tries. I was bogging a bit, so I put some diesel in the tank to mix with the veg oil. It was around 40% diesel at that point. The car ran fine for a day or so and then, about 5 days ago, it just wouldn't start. The battery is fine. It turns but won't start up. My Davco filter is a little dirty but I don't think it is clogged up with debris yet. I'll try tomorrow in the warmest part of the day.

Hmmmmmm.

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Friday, November 09, 2007

CNN Story

Here is a story from CNN on vegcars.

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Friday, November 02, 2007

More environmental benefits of wvo

I was thinking yesterday. I realized that in all of the information I have seen on the environmental benefits of running a car on vegetable oil, no one includes the added benefit of reducing the number of petro-diesel powered vehicles on the road by one.

I have posted previously on the benefits of wvo, trying to consider the whole picture - from the oil well (for petroleum) and the soybean or rapeseed plant (for veg oil) to the exhaust pipe.

Here is a synopsis of the carbon cycle, in an intentionally simple example:

The process of growing plants removes carbon from the air. Some of that carbon goes back into the air when it is burned in a vegcar. This cycle reduces the amount of airborne carbon. Petroleum takes 100% of the carbon out of the ground where it is sequestered. Then, when it is burned in a diesel or gasoline powered vehicle, a great deal of that carbon is released into the air. This increases the amount of airborne carbon.

The net effect is that vegetable oil has a much smaller impact (even a net reduction) on airborne carbon than diesel or gasoline. The benefit is even greater when you consider that the vegetable oil has already been used once to make onion rings or french fries.

There is however one more benefit that I have never heard mentioned. The diesel vehicle that was converted removes one petro-diesel powered vehicle from the road. So, in addition to the fact that the "new" vehicle burns cleaner (total cycle) than a gasoline or diesel powered vehicle, one less vehicle is out there burning petro-diesel.

Have you seen this mentioned? Am I double counting? I would appreciate your comments.

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Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Fuel tax story on ABC

CBS did a story on Sunday on a vegcar converter in North Carolina that got a visit from the IRS to try to collect the federal road tax from him. They say in the story that North Carolina (and three other states) passed laws exempting vegcar drivers from paying the road tax. If the road tax is a federal tax, how can states exempt anyone from paying it? Any thoughts or information?

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Thursday, September 27, 2007

Veg Oil Fuel in the Wilderness


As I have posted, I do worry about leaving my vegcar overnight in Yosemite.

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Wednesday, August 08, 2007

VW Beetle Conversion in Process

A Vegcar.net reader sent in this link to a new blog documenting the conversion of a Volkswagon Beetle TDI. They are using a kit from Frybrid. Good luck guys!

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

WVO Home Delivery - Slideshow

Here is a slideshow from the delivery of 1,000 gallons of SVO we received in May from Sphere Energy out of San Luis Obispo, CA. A

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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

What is the whole story?

I received the following comment on my April 29th post. She wrote:
What happens to your mileage (miles per gallon) and net emissions when you figure in the energy expended (fossil fuel or otherwise) to deliver the filtered WVO to your door?
It is a great question. I don't have an exact answer as far as net emissions and my mileage, adjusted for the delivery. But how many Americans really know their true efficiency or pollution for any fuel? How much energy is consumed extracting the oil, delivering it half-way around the world, refining it, delivering it to the stations etc. And how many deaths and injustices are committed in the process of bringing petroleum to our gas tank?

In my case, the guy who delivers the oil, runs his truck on biodiesel. He trades filtered wvo to the biodiesel makers for the fuel. Ian drove approximately 350 miles round-trip in his Powerstroke Diesel. I'm guessing (conservatively) that he got an average of 10 miles per gallon on the trip. That means that he used 35 gallons to deliver 1,000 gallons to us.

It is difficult to calculate exactly how much energy and emissions are attributable to producing and burning one gallon of diesel fuel or vegetable oil. The information that I have read, indicates that it isn't even close. The process of growing plants removes carbon from the air. Some of that carbon goes back into the air when it is burned in a vegcar. Petroleum takes 100 of the carbon out of the ground where it is sequestered. Then, when it is burned, a good deal of carbon is released into the air. The net effect is that vegetable oil has a much smaller impact on the airborne carbon.

I read something else recently that was very interesting. The energy required to build a new car is tremendous. This guy's assertion was that to save the energy that went into producing a new Prius, one would have to drive that prius several hundred thousand miles compared to buying a used car that had mileage in the mid 20's. I love Prius's and am not knocking them. I am just pointing out that the whole story is a big and complicated one.

If anyone has seen any data on this, please send it along.

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Thursday, June 07, 2007

High School Students Converting a Vegcar

Documentary filmmaker Trish Dalton has made a spot about how, "Students at The Automotive High School in Brooklyn convert a diesel car into one that runs on grease from their cafeteria."



Check out her site here.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Stickers for your vegcar

I get questions from time to time from people asking about where to get good decals for their vegcar. I never found the "right" stickers for me so I had a company make them for me. It wasn't too expensive and I got just what I wanted. For more information see this vegcar.net post from December 6, 2005.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Filling a tote

Here are a couple more photos of us filling our totes with the filtered WVO from Sphere Energy. I just returned from a 400 mile roundtrip to the Bay Area on the new fuel. The car ran great.

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Sunday, April 29, 2007

Great souce for filtered WVO

I get emails from time to time from people asking where they can buy filtered wvo for their vegcar. Today we got our second delivery from a company out of San Luis Obispo, CA called Sphere Energy. The owner, 23 year old Ian Hoover, is a very bright mechanical engineer who is devoted to alternative fuels an wvo in particular. I have a short video interview I made today that I will post to the blog soon.

He separates the oil after heating and filtering it. The "sludge" is picked up by another renderer. The creamy stuff is sold to a biodiesel plant and the "amber" is sold to vegcar drivers like me. We purchased three 330 gallon "totes" filled with 5 micron filtered wvo for $1.75/gallon (delivered 200 miles!).

I recommend Ian highly. I have already run 165 gallons of his oil through my car (a previous test order). The oil performed perfectly, even through the 20 degree winter weather.

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Watcha got in the truck?

Here is my truck (yes, it runs on gasoline!) full of cubies of wvo and a couple of new barrels. When I collect oil I do so in my vegcar. On this day my friends and I were divying up the 330 gallons of filtered wvo we purchased. I could haul more in the truck.

For those out there who haven't started collecting wvo from restaurants here are a couple of truths:
  1. Unless you are incredibly fastidious, everything gets a little sticky and starts to smell like old, used cooking oil. I recommend having some clothes just for collecting oil and wearing rubber gloves.
  2. Collecting oil is fun (at least I think so)
  3. Be gracious to the restaurant staff
  4. Leave the area as clean or cleaner than when you arrived

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Injector heaters are certainly hot

A friend (and vegcar owner) recently got a laser thermometer thingy. I measured the temperature of my injector lines, after driving about 4 miles with the injector line heaters on. The temperature varied depending on my aim, but 173 was the highest.

I haven't been using the heaters much. I sometimes switch them on for 10-15 minutes after starting on a cold day. I am concerned that for longer periods they might be too hot.

If anyone out there has any information or thoughts about these injector line heaters (from fattywagons), please let me know. Use the contact us link at the top of the page or submit a comment on this post.

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

330 Gallon Totes


We have started using 330 gallon "totes" to store and dispense wvo. Here I am with the 660 gallons we purchased a couple of months back. As the season warms up, I will likely get back to collecting and filtering my own. Filtering in the winter is just too slow with my current setup. I am still reluctant to put additional energy into heating the oil to facilitate filtering.

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Winter snow


This was taken on February 27 of this year. It is hard to believe it since it has been in the 70's and 80's all week! I got the car started a couple hours after this photo was taken. the only problem was I couldn't get up the driveway (it gets pretty steep beyond the view in the photo). I have chains but blew off my meeting and worked at home.

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Friday, March 02, 2007

Lovecraft Commercial

Check this out. I think some friends of Lovecraft made this commercial. I don't think it actually runs on TV.

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Pouring jelly into the tank

It has been pretty cold here, dipping below freezing at night and rising to the 40's and 50's during the day. As I filled my tank yesterday with wvo, as has happened repeatedly this winter, the bottom half of the cubie was kind of like jelly. New veg oil from Costco had the same consistency.

I have been using a 3 to 1 wvo to diesel mix and it has been performing very well. I have had no bogging lately. I don't have a tank heater, nor a heated fuel line from the tank. I do have a booster pump that draws the wvo forward from the tank, taking some of the strain off of my injector pump. As I wrote in an earlier post, I purchased that booster pump from LovecraftBiofuels in LA.

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Saturday, February 24, 2007

A couple hundred more miles on veg oil

I drove to the Bay Area yesterday - about 190 miles. I put 5 gallons of diesel on top of 13 gallons of wvo. The car ran great all the way. I had the injector line heaters on for a good portion of the trip. I don't know how to tell if they are doing any good but it still makes sense to me to heat the oil as close to the injectors as possible. My tank is showing slightly over half full now. I'm looking forward to the drive back home tomorrow.

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Thursday, February 22, 2007

Visor light

I finally figured out what was happening. Several times in the past year, my battery was largely drained and I couldn't start the car. My alternator did die last year and I had it replaced - twice. But I never figured out why at seemingly random times, my battery just drained while the car was parked.

Today, in the midst of a snowstorm, I got into the Mercedes and tried to start it up. It was no use. There was enough of a charge for the pre-glow light and other dashboard lights, but it just couldn't turn over. It was then that I noticed that the passenger seat visor was down. And to my astonishment, the mirror light was on!

My visors are both missing the door flap that covers the mirrors and lights and turns the lights on and off. In fact, in 18 months of owning the car, I had never seen either of the visor lights on at all. This is certainly the culprit. I think tomorrow morning I'll remove the bulbs from these lights so this can't happen again. Ever.

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